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American Images of China, 1931-1949
 9781503615939

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AMERICAN IMAGES OF CHINA

1931-1949

American Images of China 1931-1949

T. CHRISTOPHER JESPERSEN

Stanford University Press Stanford, California

Stanford University Press Stanford, California © 1996 by the Board of Trustees of the

Leland Stanford Junior University Printed in the United States of America CIP

data appear at the end of the book

Stanford University Press publications are distributed exclusively by Stanford University Press within the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Central America; they are distributed exclusively by Cambridge University Press throughout the rest of the world.

For Theresa

Acknowledgments

This book is an example of what can happen if you drop out of college. I left the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the middle of my junior year, not knowing what I wanted to do. But before leaving, I had the good fortune of enrolling in a course on United States foreign policy taught by Michael Hunt. Although Professor Hunt had nothing directly to do with this project, I think in some indirect way he did influence my thinking. I certainly find myself coming back to his work time and again, though I do not mean to burden him with any responsibility for what I have written here. What I quickly discovered outside of college was that I had no inclination to make being busboy or bartender a career. Thus, the decision to return to college was an easy one. Because I came from New Jersey, Rutgers seemed the logical choice, mostly because it was affordable for a state resident. It was there that things came together. During the spring 1985 semester, I enrolled in a course on America and Vietnam. Two positive developments came out of that class. The first occurred when the professor agreed to work with me on a senior honors thesis for the following academic year and later took me on as a graduate student; the second I only discovered during the history department's orientation in the fall of 1986. There I was approached by a fellow graduate student who asked me coyly, "Weren't you Lyndon Johnson?" Indeed, I was, or more accurately, had been when I played Johnson during an in-class exercise in the America and Vietnam class. That simple question was the beginning of a truly wonderful relationship.

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Acknowledgments

In working on this project for the past decade or so, I have received invaluable help from a number of people and organizations. The Richard Schlater Fund at Rutgers and the George Marshall Foundation provided me with financial assistance for research travel. The numerous librarians at the archives I visited were uniformly helpful, but special mention must go to Jean Holliday, now retired from the Seely G. Mudd Manuscript Library at Princeton University. Her enthusiasm and breadth of knowledge made working there a real joy. Martha Lund Smalley and Joan Duffy of the Yale Divinity School Library also deserve special thanks for their assistance in securing some wonderful visual materials. Clark Atlanta University provided financial assistance for reproducing the illustrations. Portions of Chapters 2 and 3 appeared in the Journal of American-East Asian Relations (Fall 1992).

Friends and former colleagues from Rutgers and elsewhere who read parts of this or provided inspiration during the process include Jonathan Nashel, Torun Willits, Roy Domenico, and George Sirgiovanni. As is his wont for excess, John Rossi did more, both then and later. Mark White, a magnificent chap in his own right, not only read the whole thing and made useful suggestions, he also assisted in the research. Warren Kimball, at Rutgers-Newark, proved to be as sharp an editor as he is boisterous a personality. Ralph Levering of Davidson College and Bob Schulzinger of the University of Colorado at Boulder provided helpful suggestions on earlier versions of chapters I presented at two conferences. I spent three years as an adjunct assistant professor in the history department at the University of Arizona. In many respects, I was sorry to leave, mostly because of the many wonderful people I got to know there. Colleagues who commented on drafts include Kathy Morrissey, Patrick Miller, and Jim Millward, who also gave me useful pointers on Chinese history and names. Along with Alison Futrell, he plays a mean guitar and can sing, making them my first choice for a history department talent show. John Krueckeberg's power of Dale Carnegieism proved helpful as did his comments. Most importantly, however, I benefited from my association with Michael Schaller. He read the entire manuscript, read revised sections, and provided professional guidance and personal friendship, not to mention a heavy-duty child's backpack for hiking around the mountains and deserts of Arizona. Alexander has certainly enjoyed the rides, the view, and pulling on his dad's hair. I have limited my acknowledgments to the people who directly affected this project, with three exceptions: my mother, Joan, who is a

Acknowledgments

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nice person, fine company, and a good grandmother to Alexander, and Tom and Eva Fox, who have provided great, good friendship along the way and essential help at critical times, most recently during the move to Atlanta. I cannot thank them enough for so many things. Scott Kampmeier deserves special attention because he is a fine historian in his own right. More directly for my concerns, he has always been willing to put aside the time to read my work, make insightful comments, and cook and share a good meal. At Stanford University Press, Muriel Bell, Barbara James, and John Feneron have all been helpful in assisting me in understanding the publishing process. Shirley Taylor deserves special mention for catching not only my phrasing infelicities but a few factual errors as well. I should note that in using Chinese names, I have tried to follow the example set by Jonathan Spence in The Search for Modern China. That is, I have used the pinyin system for the most part with a few notable exceptions. Chiang Kai-shek remains in Cantonese rather than being switched to Jiang Jieshi, for convenience mostly since all the documents I quote spell his name that way. Canton is Canton in the 1930's but Guangzhou in the 198o's, reflecting the change in usage. Likewise, I use Beijing when discussing recent times, and Peking and Peiping when historical circumstances warrant. I follow the original spelling in quoted matter and have basically put everything else into pinyin. Finally, there are three people without whom I could not have completed this project, at least not as it presently stands. Michael Adas proved to be a model researcher and teacher, not to mention good company. He helped guide this project in certain crucial respects while I was a graduate student at Rutgers and since that time has continued to offer me his comments and advice. If I had not taken that class on America and Vietnam in the spring of r 98 5 with Lloyd C. Gardner, now the Charles and Mary Beard Professor of History, beyond avoiding the restaurant business, I do not know what direction my life would have taken. As an adviser, scholar, and teacher he is unique. His laissez-faire approach to what avenues of history his students explore is complemented by his keen personal interest in his students as people. His example, guidance, and friendship have been invaluable. The usual caveat about responsibility for errors applies here except for anything really egregious. In that case, I want the opportunity to reassess these acknowledgments. This book is the product of a specific time and two particular

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Acknowledgments

places: New Jersey and Arizona. From the very beginning, there has been someone special, someone extraordinary; with whom I have shared equally wonderful and trying experiences. It all started with a simple question and took off in a direction neither one of us anticipated. For so many times, for so many reasons, and for so much more to come, this book is for Theresa.

T. C.J.

Contents

Preface Prologue: Missionaries and the Creation of American Perceptions of China, 1890-I93I

xiii

I

I

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

II

2

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

24

3

United China Relief and the Creation of American Images of China

45

4

Crusading Together: The Glorious War Years

59

5

Madame Chiang and the Personality of Sino-American Relations

82

The Underside of Sino-American Relations During World War II

Io8

7

The Dawning of the American Century

I26

8

The Collapse of the American Century

ISO

9

Coming to Terms with the Emotional Attachment to China

I72

6

Contents

xii NOTES

I93

BIBLIOGRAPHY

235

INDEX

249

(Illustrations follow page 44)

Preface

Upon assuming the office of president in 1989, George Bush brought with him the personal conviction that he understood China and that he had special insights into its people, their society, and the nature of the monumental innovations he was sure were imminent there. In fact, a little over a month after his inauguration, he traveled to China on his first official visit abroad as president. He told Chinese television journalists that their country was one of the first to experience the new "winds of change" sweeping the world toward the twenty-first century. These transformational gusts, "sometimes gentle, sometimes strong and powerful," had caused China, "like a tree in a winter wind ... to bend and adapt to new ways and new ideas and reform." This fresh spirit of hope augured well for Sino-American relations; the American people and their Chinese counterparts, moreover, enjoyed a fundamental value in common: a dedication to family. Over the years, this was what had bound the two nations together in spite of some rather trying episodes. "The Americans and Chinese share many things," he observed, "but perhaps none is more important than our strong sense of family. 111 A month later, speaking with Amish and Mennonite leaders in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Bush, in a rather offhand intejection, recalled the years when he and his wife, Barbara, had lived in China during the mid-1970's while he served as the American emissary to the People's Republic. At the time, the two had wondered about the condition of the Chinese family, fearing that there might have "been an erosion" of it under Communist rule. They were relieved, deeply

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moved even, to discover that its importance had persevered: "The family has never been weakened in China," the president commented, "it's always been strong. A totalitarian state can't stamp that out, and that faith can't be crushed by a state doctrine." During their most recent visit, an emotional moment had come when some members of the audience at one of the president's speaking engagements had suddenly yelled, "How is our sister, Dorothy?" The memory of the Bushes' daughter, who had been christened at the age of sixteen while they lived in China, was simply overwhelming. "I was all choked up," the president admitted; "every family has experienced something that sticks in their hearts." For George Bush, it was China.2 The events of June 3, 1989, quickly challenged the president's sentimental recollections as Chinese authorities ordered a military crackdown on protestors in Tiananmen Square. The resulting loss of life, bloodshed, and imprisonment of thousands of mostly student demonstrators led Bush to confess a "certain sense of personal disappointment" over the actions taken by the Chinese government.3 At a news conference two days after the massacre, he indicated that the United States' response would be informed by his knowledge of Chinese history, his "keen personal interest in China," and his broader understanding of the Chinese people, which he asserted was rather substantial.4 In the end, although the president condemned Beijing's actions publicly, he pursued a policy that was thought of as constructive engagement; this included sending a secret team consisting of National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger to China a month after Tiananmen. The former, upon meeting with Deng Xiaoping, toasted the Chinese leader as "A friend forever." 5 Further evidence of this policy came the following year when the Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Richard Solomon, outlined the administration's thinking during congressional hearings on whether to renew China's most-favored-nation status. "1, for one, have faith in the dynamism of the marketplace, in the inexorable effect of economic modernization on social and political reform." He concluded by reminding the senators that they "should not underestimate the power of international commerce as a force for change. So long as China is engaged economically, the very forces for reform that erupted at Tiananmen will still be in play. China cannot sail against the winds of change."6 George Bush clearly wanted to be the one to steer those "winds of change"; he yearned to be there when that magical moment arrived, when China became the land of his dreams. His hopes were nothing new, however; in fact, the history of Sino-American relations con-

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XV

tains a range of varied and long-standing cultural constructions on the American side, ranging from racism and xenophobia to naivete, paternalism, and awe. That Bush subscribed to a combination of the last three is obvious, but understanding why he did so involves considering the ideas Americans have acquired about their role in world affairs. Because images of China have largely come from Americans' assumptions about themselves and not from the reality of Chinese linguistic, historical, or cultural similarities, an intensive look at Chinese history cannot explain this phenomenon in and of itself. Instead, the history of China can best function as the background to this story. But just as with any painting, the background is an important part of the whole in how it serves to offset and highlight the events and characters in the foreground. Likewise, traditional diplomatic history cannot provide all the answers, though it can address some of the major issues relevant to this discussion. More germane is the observation made by the historian Amy Kaplan, "A political or economic process abroad is inseparable from the social relations and cultural discourses of race, gender, ethnicit)j and class at home. 117 By bringing together cultural and diplomatic histories and by focusing on the mass media and popular culture within the United States as well as on the work of certain Chinese relief agencies, which depended on the help of domestic contributors, it becoines clear how and in what way the cultural and political context coincided with specific administrations' goals in certain episodes, and, in other instances, limited the options open to foreign policy makers, but in either case had a significant impact upon the policies desired versus those actually pursued.8 Almost fifty years before President Bush spoke about his aspirations for China, another influential American expressed many of the same ideas. Best known as the founder and chief editor of Time, Life, and Fortune magazines, Henry R. Luce is also remembered for articulating and encouraging much of the prevailing sentiment toward China during the 193o's and 1940's. Bush talked about "winds of change"i Luce saw a wave of western Christianit)j political democrac)j and economic capitalism about to surge through China. Bush called for a "New World Order" at the end of the Cold Wari Luce, in a 1941 essay in Life, anticipated an "American Century," during which the American people would have to accept their broader obligations. Luce's essay outlined an overall structure for international affairs that had as its foundation a world in which the United States was the new Middle Kingdom: "America as the dynamic center of

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ever-widening spheres of enterprise, America as the training center of skilled servants of mankind, America as the Good Samaritan, really believing again that it is more blessed to give than to receive, and America as the powerhouse of the ideals of Freedom and Justice."9 America would function as benevolent hegemon, or paternal authority, acting under the presumption that it alone knew what was best for other nations. Luce occupied a crucial position in twentieth-century American society by virtue of the media power he wielded in the age before television. Important as he was for journalism and the mass media, however, he has been largely neglected in studies of the nation's foreign policy. 10 By 1939, Luce's multimedia empire reached millions of Americans every week. Later, when Time Inc. launched overseas editions of Time and Life, his message was received by millions more outside the United States. With publishing success and the subsequent ventures into radio and newsreel production came the tremendous power of determining what information people received. This was particularly true of Life. Its revolutionary format, using photographs to convey impressions, tell stories, and provide simplistic analyses of complicated events, served Luce's purposes well. As a result, his journalistic itinerary often influenced the opinions and attitudes people developed about the subjects covered by his media. Like most politicians, Luce had an agenda; more importantly, he had the substantial means with which to promote it. Luce was not the only person to have such optimism about China's future. Missionaries, writers, politicians, as well as many ordinary citizens, became enthralled by the same image of a China that reflected American ideals. Pearl Buck, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Wendell Willkie, Walter Judd, Joseph Stilwell, Claire Chennault, Albert Wedemeyer, among many other prominent literary, political, military, and business leaders, plus the thousands who worked for the various philanthropic, political, educational, and cultural organizations, sought to bring about that same China. Thus, regardless of how important he was for the creation and perpetuation of this manner of thinking, Luce is only a convenient lens through which it can be discerned. The earlier notion of an American Century for China came about through the intersection of two developments. The first was the liberal internationalism embodied in the Open Door principle enunciated by Secretary of State John Hay at the turn of the century. The historian Emily Rosenberg, in her outline of the nature of America's expansion from the 189o's until the end of World War II, applies the

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xvii

term "liberal-developmentalism" to the extension of American commerce and culture abroad, part of which involved the "belief that other nations could and should replicate America's own developmental experience": America's economic and social history could serve as a universal model for the rest of the world, as could its popular culture and political ideology, making the entire national experience an appropriate model for other countries. Even William Appleman Williams, in his revisionist study of American foreign policy, lists this phenomenon as one of the guiding principles of America's approach to international relations: namely, "the idea ... that other people cannot really solve their problems and improve their lives unless they go about it in the same way as the United States." 11 The second, as James Guimond observes in his study American photography, was the conservative populism of the r930's and 1940's, when the conventional sentiment was expressed in a "willingness to see ordinary Americans and their middle-class institutions and culture in such a positive way." Guimond notes, in discussing a Life article on a typical Saturday night in Franklin, Indiana, "What Life's readers wanted, it seemed, was a stereotyped village that confirmed their nostalgic beliefs about small towns in which no one is bored, poor, or lonely.m 2 Not only did the coverage of domestic issues reflect this kind of thinking, but the attention accorded international stories did too, especially those relating to China. The writer Graham Peck once commented on the nature of American projections onto other peoples by warning: "American anthropomorphism ... is one of our gravest handicaps in foreign affairs. As a nation we seem over-eager to attribute our own character to other nations.m 3 What he described can be termed "America-morphism" as much as anything else, and from an analytical standpoint, better still are the fundamental assumptions inherent in a paternalistic outlook. Paternalism, and all it implies about treating adults as children, lies at the root of the American attitude toward not only China but a good many other nations, particularly in Asia. Regarding nations as lessthan-sovereign entities and looking upon other peoples as childlike often provides a convenient rationale for policies that necessitate involvement or interference in the affairs of another nation. Ostensibly, under the guise of "benevolent" intentions, these actions are taken for the good of the recipient. 14 Paternalism, evoking as it does familial relations, most notably those between father and child, is especially suitable when applied to an earlier era in the twentieth century, when the United States tried to assume the role of a father, implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, casting China as a child. Although not unfa-

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miliar in United States national attitudes toward other Asian nations, this thinking toward China has been unique in its longevity and pervasiveness. 15 Growing out of the varied circumstances, exigencies, and necessities of the 193o's and 1940's, a paternalistic outlook brought a missionary-conversion ethos together with a secular sense of national benevolence. Americans came to profess faith in a China developing along the path blazed by their nation. The Chinese people appeared willing and eager to adopt Protestant religion and democratic political ideology, especially under the guidance of their nominal leader, Chiang Kai -shek. After r 9 3 r, Chiang's popularly accepted image in the United States became one of a valiant, heroic Christian ready to lead his people into an American-style future. An economic angle to the relationship promised an enormously profitable trading connection, one guaranteed by China's massive population. These ideas further reinforced what Americans wanted to believe about themselves; thus they endured. The idea that China could be changed also carried with it the assumption that China should be changed (and vice versa).' 6 But rather than simply being foisted onto an unsuspecting public by a manipulative media in collusion with vested interests, these notions were offered, received, and more commonly accepted as a partial solution to existing problems. In seeking to change China through the application of social and political structures abroad, Americans tried to reassure themselves of their uniqueness and special place in history-assumptions that were brought under question by the Great Depression and World War II. To see China with the eye of paternalism was to see the United States as the developmentally more advanced nation, offering its knowledge and experience to a grateful recipient, all supposedly in a spirit of genuine altruism. The effort to categorize the Chinese people as enthusiastically malleable reinforced the domestic trend toward conservative populism in a number of other important respects. The hierarchical classification of races played a role in this development, and so did constructions of gender roles, in that both strengthened the status quo instead of promoting social change. Amy Kaplan has argued that placing imperialism in the foreground of American culture "shows how putatively domestic conflicts are not simply contained at home but how they both emerge in response to international struggles and spill over national boundaries to be reenacted, challenged, or transformed.1117 The broader cultural constructions of China were part of the process Kaplan describes. In attempting to see themselves in a fa-

Preface

xix

vorable light through the projection of idealized images about their own characteristics, attributes, and habits onto the Chinese, Americans were gazing at China as if it were a mirror, "an occasion for striking self-adoring poses," as one commentator later put it.18 Images, conceptions, and cultural constructions here involve the public discourse over United States' relations ~ith China; they include the beliefs, emotions, stereotypes, opinions, mental pictures, and perhaps most importantly, the hopes that were all a part of the intracultural dynamics of the popular thinking about China. This phenomenon also entailed the use of facile comparisons to understand China, its people, and their history through the prism of American examples and experiences. To encourage this perception, media accounts of foreign events used simplistic analogies and distorted imagery, something that persists to this day. On the relevance of this for policymaking, one sociologist has argued, "Publicly available meanings facilitate certain patterns of action, making them readily available, while discouraging others." 19 Many cultural historians contend that the relationship between consciously promoted public images and their impact remains elusive. In his extensive study of advertising and American society from 1920 to 1940, for example, Roland Marchand concedes, "I cannot prove conclusively that the American people absorbed the values and ideas of the ads, nor that consumers wielded the power to ensure that the ads would mirror their lives," but he insists that the advertisements reflected not reality, but rather a distortion of it.'0 Much the same holds true here. There is no one-to-one relationship whereby the propagation of a specific image produced a set of quantifiable results. The correlation between culture and policymaking is not that simple. But any examination of Sino-American relations must take the media into account, for it is there that much of the public debate has unfolded. Two sociologists have even argued that "media discourse dominates the larger issue culture, both reflecting it and contributing to its creation."21 In that respect, it is fair to say that not only did Hemy Luce, through his media empire, influence the way in which many Americans carne to view China, but his consistent efforts, combined with those of others, certainly reflected many of the ideas Americans wanted to hold about China, regardless of their accuracy. In speaking to the idea of public discourse, one historian has indicated that "interests, power and values play themselves out on a single, level field of reality, the conceptual field of language. 1122 Public language, both printed and spoken, whether attributable to government officials,

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missionaries, business executives, newspaper reporters, or ordinary citizens, constitutes an important realm for determining the various assumptions that shaped Americans' thinking about China. And for that rhetoric to strike a responsive chord, the historian Michael Hunt has written that it "must draw on values and concerns widely shared and easily understood by its audience." 23 Henry Luce knew that as well as anyone. His efforts were directed to the larger hope of a friendly China intent on adopting American ways. This message found resonance within the general population because of what it said about the American people and how it reflected what they wanted to believe about themselves. At its most intense, this phenomenon spanned only eighteen years. It began with three events in 1931-Chiang Kai-shek's conversion to Christianity, the publication of Pearl Buck's novel The Good Earth, and the Japanese invasion of Manchuria-and ended rather abruptly in 1949 when the Chinese Communists came to power. Still, it can be considered an American Century of sorts because it was a period distinctly marked by a particular way of looking at China, Asia-the entire world for that matter-that asked Americans to accept their global, paternal responsibilities. When that reflexive image was shattered by events in China over which the United States had no control, the reaction was highly emotional, and seriously damaging both professionally and personally for those caught in the cross-currents of American national myths and Chinese historical realities. The United States took nearly thirty years to reestablish official relations with China after the 1949 revolution. To understand the depth of the emotions that made that lengthy denial possible, to comprehend the manner in which normalization came about, and to gauge the present direction Sino-American relations are apparently taking, it is first necessary to look at the images that once dominated the American way of thinking about China and have now, it appears, gained currency once again.

AMERICAN IMAGES OF CHINA

1931-1949

PROLOGUE

Missionaries and the Creation of American Perceptions of China, 1890-1931 Missionaries are the pioneers of trade and commerce. Civilization, learning, instruction breed new wants which commerce supplies. -Charles Denby to Secretary of State Gresham, 1895 Religion is the most fundamental thing in civilization. -John R. Mott, "Urgency and Crisis in the Far East," 1908 One would be justified in concluding that apparently China exists for the missionary, rather than the missionary for China. -Walter Judd to William Strong, 1927

From the last decade of the nineteenth century until 1931, American national attitudes toward China were based upon two powerful but contradictory impulses. The first centered around what J. A. Hobson called God and Mammon: "The cooperation of economics and religion." China appealed to America's evangelical sense of enlightenment and regeneration, that "holy kind of violence," as the Puritan Thomas Hooker called it in referring to the point where God's infinite perfection intersected with man's manifest imperfection and, in the process, lifted the individual from a degraded condition to one of exaltation. A similar but secular variation of this phenomenon was at work with respect to national attitudes toward China. Americans, so it was assumed, would bring their infinite national goodness and virtue-their Christian dedication and sense of national mission-to the imperfect lives of the millions of Chinese. One Presbyterian missionary wrote, "Christian Civilization will bring to China a truer conception of the nature of man, a better understanding of his relations and duties, of his dignity and destiny. 111 The American Minister in Peking, Charles Denby, articulated much the same notion, in a cruder fashion, in I 89 5: "The educated Chinaman, who speaks English, becomes a new man; he commences to

2

Prologue

think." 2 However expressed, the sentiment was the same: the United States would give China the opportunity to remake itself in America's spiritual, political, and cultural image. This determined strand of Protestant Christianity, the God Hobson mentioned, moved many missionaries to travel to China. The same idea also excited enormous economic prospects of the China market. China was a distant, mysterious but ultimately enticing land, beckoning to Americans with the potential wealth of Asia, the Mammon part of Hobson's dichotomy. American industrialists, manufacturers, and investors saw a vast opportunity to absorb the nation's rapidly increasing productive capacity of the late nineteenth century. And government leaders, fearful that the prolonged economic woes of the 189o's might foment a social revolution at home, saw at least a partial solution to their economic, and ultimately political, problems.3 Here the forces of Mammon evidenced themselves most obviously in Secretary of State John Hay's Open Door notes. Hay's fear that the Europeans were carving up the China pie before the United States could get a slice led him to issue his notes in r 899 and 1900. Although America did not have the military power to enforce his diplomatic caveat, he understood that the nation's new industrial base gave it the means to compete favorably with the Europeans if given the chance.4 On a much different level, but one no less important, the second impulse in American conceptions of China was a direct contradiction to the previous enticement of spiritual and economic salvation. This impulse centered around the virulent racism that led to exclusionary legislation and kept most Chinese from entering the United States after r882. Many Americans looked upon the Chinese, especially the laboring class, as members of a subhuman race that threatened to undermine their way of life. The fear of a Yellow Peril gripped them with a nebulous, but powerful, dread of uncontrolled Asian expansion. Labor leaders who favored developing trade with China to protect American jobs were opposed to having Chinese emigrate to the United States and threaten to take away those same jobs.5 Pressures upon western state governments, especially in California, finally led to the passage of a series of Chinese exclusion laws, which remained in effect until 1943.6 American perceptions of China thus ran the gamut from Christian paternalism, to economic aspirations, and finally to racist preconceptions, in short, a melange of often contradictory attitudes, expectations, and hopes. Entreating China on the one hand and keeping the Chinese out of the United States on the other underscored the marked contrasts between the pressures for international

Prologue

3

expansion versus the domestic forces of racism and xenophobia. In the end, the two extremes were not necessarily exclusive; rather, they tended to reinforce each other. The conspicuous incongruity between these two perspectives essentially derived from the American sense of national and cultural paternalism, which centered around the simple but fundamental assumption that the Chinese people wanted (or at least should have aspired) to become more like Americans. Starting with Christianity, Americans sought to bring the light of heaven to the heathens of Asia; from there, democracy quite naturally followed. "The missionary movement/' one historian has commented, "was democracy at work. 117 From a religious conversion to Christ came the ability to comprehend and enjoy the democratic way of life. That, in turn, invariably led to a demand for American agricultural, industrial, and manufactured products, until the Chinese were destined to become just like Americans. Charles Denby, writing Secretary of State Gresham in r895, observed that missionaries played a crucial role in the development of overseas trade, but humanity had not "devised any better ... engine or means for civilizing savage peoples as proselytism to Christianity.''8 He was not alone in his assessment. Enthusiastic American missionaries saw China as a land replete with a population ready for conversion to Christianity and Western ideals. Because that vision meant that the Chinese people would become active consumers of American products, business leaders and politicians could join missionaries in looking upon the Asian nation with the same sense of promise. Part of the initial evangelical enthusiasm for China developed from the religious revivals held by Dwight L. Moody during the latter half of the r 88o's. One meeting in Northfield, Massachusetts, became famous for the group that came out of it. The Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions (SVML an offshoot of the Young Men's Christian Association, devoted itself to spreading the Christian gospel to the less fortunate peoples around the world. The members went forth brimming with the confidence and optimism that they could evangelize the entire world in one generation-and certainly China, where, as one missionary noted, a million Chinese died every month without the benefit of Christ. One member of the SVM, Horace Pitkin, remarked, "China was the goal, the lodestar, the great magnet that drew us all in those days. 119 Many of the volunteers were women who felt an obligation to serve.10 This kind of dedication led Pitkin and his missionary friends Sherwood Eddy and Henry W. Luce to jog an additional mile, exhorting themselves to go the extra distance

4

Prologue

with the chant, "This will carry us another mile in China." These three American Protestant missionaries epitomized the zeal of those who set out with the idea of creating a new China based upon the Western, Christian model. Although Pitkin, Eddy, and Luce never accomplished their ambitious goal of evangelizing the entire world, they, along with others like them, did succeed in creating lasting impressions of China in the United States. The Presbyterianism of Henry Winters Luce, in particular, invigorated him with a sense of national and religious purpose. These two forces-his love for his country and his religious mission-came together and formed the core of his outlook on the world. In a letter he wrote to a friend while traveling through Texas in I 89 5, he exclaimed, "This is a great country out here-one feels like renewing his grip on God about every five minutes. 1111 The elder Luce passed along these ideas to his son, Henry Robinson Luce, and continued to do so even after Henry R. had left China to attend Hotchkiss at the age of fourteen. In one letter dated November I9I4, the father wrote to his son that the recent outbreak of war in Europe signaled not that Christianity had failed Europe, "only [that] Europe has failed to be Christian." He later indicated that Jesus was a man "ahead of his own time ... ahead of our time." Christ's teachings were best understood not within the context of an era long past but instead for what they truly were: "permanent, fundamental, realizable.1112 Missionaries like Henry W. Luce brought with them a number of preconceptions and expectations that shaped the manner in which they viewed not only the Chinese but also their own mission. The historian Frederick Jackson Turner expressed much of the growing national sentiment in I 89 3 by observing that the American frontier was closed. But many American missionaries saw themselves as a natural part of the nation's continued westward expansion, beyond the Pacific. China was part of the new frontier. 13 One missionary to China, in an attempt to transmit some of his nation's frontier heritage to his children, constructed a log cabin made out of bamboo so that they could experience their nation's dynamic past in spite of being raised thousands of miles away from America. 14 At the same time, however, many missionaries to China recognized its history as a great civilization. Its huge population offered enormous potential. One woman expressed her aspirations in a pamphlet in which she argued that of all the heathen nations of the world, China stood first in line because of the immense need of its people

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5

and because of its "leading position in the scale of nations." The writer, Geraldine Guiness, added that recent developments as of 1890-namely; the distribution of over half a million Bibles, Testaments, and Scriptures in the last six months-appeared to augur well for the promise of a Christian tidal wave sweeping over China. 15 Eighteen years later, John R. Matt, one of the original leaders of the Student Volunteer Movement and subsequently a high-ranking member of the YMCA, observed to his peers who were meeting in Liverpool, England, that China was "in the midst of an intellectual revolution." The opportunity this profound change presented for Christian missionaries was astounding. The existing fluid conditions, he suggested, allowed Christianity the chance to set the course for China for centuries to come: "May God help us to infuse China with Christian thought, Christian spirit, Christian influence?" The possibilities were there, and a Christian education promised to be one of the keys toward realizing their goals.' 6 In addition to the change missionaries tried to bring about within China, their experiences had a significant impact upon their own children. Many "mishkids," as they were often called, remembered their days growing up in China with fondness. Pearl Buck, whose fiction played an important role in boosting Americans' romantic notions about China during the 1930's, remembered her days growing up there with a great deal of tenderness and affection.' 7 Henry R. Luce, who grew up in Qingdao, recalled of that city, "There was one department store, wonderfully cool in summer, full of many of the wondrous things Americans could read about in the Sears Roebuck catalogue, and rich with the smell of newly opened boxes." It was "a perfectly extraordinary city," he wrote; "There is just nothing to compare it with ... [where] the delicately curving waves kissed the silken shore. This was Tsingtao until 1914.1118 Another missionary daughter, equally nostalgic, described the Chinese countryside of her childhood: "There is no place more peaceful than a Chinese valley on a summer's evening .... When each mountain like a shaggy animal lies with outstretched head on the flank of the next, and when the softest of sunset light slants down to the light green of the valley floor, one is charmed into tranquillity. 1119 But for both Luce and Buck, the way in which they developed ideas about the United States was important. Buck recounted how her parents told her wonderful stories about an idealized America, a "dreamworld, fantastically beautiful, inhabited by a people ... entirely good, a land indeed from which all blessings followed":

6

Prologue While I was a child my [parents] regaled me with memories of quiet village streets, large houses set far back in trees and lawns, decent folk walking to church on Sundays to worship God in beautiful old churches, law-abiding men and women, children who obeyed their parents and learned their lessons in school. Doctors cured the few sick folk, or sent them to wonderfully clean hospitals, and certainly no one had cholera or dysentery or typhus or died of bubonic plague. Neither were there lepers to be seen lounging along the streets intimidating the pedestrians and shopkeepers, and beggars there were none. 20

Henry R. Luce's mother read to him from the Bible and from a children's history of the United States, and his father told him stories about his own favorite Americans, particularly Theodore Roosevelt.' 1 Indeed, Luce later came to espouse the same kind of muscular Christianity usually associated with TR. One historian has asserted that Luce's love of America was "one of the many signs of his father's influence.1122 But Luce, like Pearl Buck, grew up with an idealized view of a perfect America: "I had no experience of evil in terms of Americans .... Put along with that [the] idea that America was a wonderful country, with opportunity and freedom and justice for all, and you not only get an idealistic, but a romantic view-a profoundly false romantic view." 23 This Christianized, idealized notion of America apparently inspired the missionaries and others caught up in this way of thinking to see in the crowded and often desperate circumstances of China only boundless opportunity. Even in the face of rapidly changing conditions there, they persisted in their belief that China would be able to fulfill their dreams of success on a scale unmatched anywhere else in the world. Of the enormous changes that occurred in China between the r 89o's and the r 92o's, the most important was the final collapse of the Qing dynasty in 191 I. During the 192o's and out of the conditions of the internecine politics of the warlord era in Chinese history; two parties arose to struggle for the control of the nation for the next thirty years: the Guomindang (National People's Party) and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). For American missionaries, the rise of Chinese nationalism during the 192o's generally took an antiChristian tone. Christianity was associated with Western domination through such devices as the unequal treaties and foreign concessions. The missionary movement in the United States felt the impact of events not only abroad but also at home. Fewer Americans responded to the evangelical call. In 1920, some I,73I new missionaries set sail for foreign nations in an attempt to bring Christianity to the heathens, and 2,783 members of the Student Volunteer Movement

Prologue

7

signed the organization's pledge. By r 92 7 the number of missionaries leaving the country had dropped to 558, and a year later, only 252 members signed the Student Volunteer Pledge. Moreover, by 1927, evangelizing the world had in one generation fallen to one of the three least important reasons for becoming a missionary?• There was still the call of social progress, however, and if converting Chinese to Christ now seemed less important than before, at least bringing improved agricultural methods, medical techniques, and education could stimulate the same kind of missionary interest.25 But the switch had its costs. As one of the principal organizations involved in this change from evangelizing to improving living conditions, the YMCA found negotiating this hazardous path very tricky. One historian has noted, "As long as the Y spread American ways, it thrived because of donor contributions." When the organization changed its focus, it found Americans unwilling to fund the new programs?6 The late 192o's therefore constituted a difficult period for American missionaries, and a transitional one too, domestically as well as in China. In spite of these apparent setbacks, many missionaries were still optimistic. The hostile environment created by nascent Chinese nationalism, and an increasing harassment of the missionary community, failed to discourage the Reverend William R. Johnson, for example. Johnson, a Methodist missionary who lived in China from 1906 until 1942, found cause for hope in the Chinese Nationalists. Writing to a friend late in 1927, he insisted that Protestantism remained "favorable to the chief ideals of the Nationalists-freedom of conscience, democracy and national aspirations viz-a-viz the Powers." He added confidently, "China sees more clearly than ever who her friends are." The Nationalists were much more promising than the news reports had indicated, he insisted; moreover, Chinese public opinion had never been so unified. Because Protestant missionaries had served as such a positive force for independence, he predicted they would soon profit handsomely from their past efforts.'7 Not all missionaries agreed, although their reasons did not reflect on the Chinese people. These missionaries criticized Johnson's sort of optimism by saying that the missionaries were not devoting themselves to making conditions better for the sake of the Chinese but were more concerned with their own comfort and safety than with carrying out the higher mission ordained to them by God. Walter H. Judd, a medical missionary and one-time chairman of the National Student Council of the SVM-and a man later described by one historian as the American most responsible for building an American

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Prologue

constituency for Chiang Kai-shek through his activities as a member of Congress-said that he had traveled to China with the intention of helping the Middle Kingdom turn toward the "direction of cooperation and peace. 1128 But in 192 7, in a nineteen-page single-spaced letter to the Reverend William Strong in Boston, Judd offered a scathing critique on the state of American Protestant missionary activity. Judd expressed his severe disappointment over the "smug complacency" that had infected the missionary community. He enumerated the serious mistakes that its members had been making for decades, among them the proclivity to live in elaborate brick compounds, which he thought not only was inconsistent with the missionary purpose but also had the effect of severing ties with the Chinese community. Too many American missionaries were satisfied with preaching the Christian gospel during "office hours," and instead of living among the people they were supposedly saving, they constructed "a miniature home land," a "little America" in which their immediate and overriding loyalties were only to themselves and to those of their "own blood, language, flag, and culture. 1129 Judd believed that the recent harassment of missionaries had been carefully planned to scare as many Americans as possible into leaving the country. He deplored the cowardice and rationalizations that accompanied the exodus, and he had no patience with missionaries who felt betrayed by the Chinese, for whom, they argued, they had selflessly served for so long. How, he asked, could anyone reasonably expect the Chinese to possess any sense of loyalty toward a group of people who, more than anything else, had tried to "sow superiority complexes, special privileges, patronizing philanthropy, foreign concessions, gunboats, foreign flags on missions and Chinese churches, etc. over a period of thirty-five years?"30 Judd concluded that Protestant missionaries had fallen well short of their professed reasons for traveling to and remaining in China. They had succumbed to preserving their comfortable life, and the moment any discomfort appeared, either mental or physical, they immediately packed up in a rush and fled for protection under a foreign flag. Even though some missionaries were staying on in China, Judd insisted that they were doing so more for themselves than for the Chinese. Holed up in their brick compounds, refusing to delegate any authority to their Chinese disciples, intent on living the sort of life they had left behind in the United States, American Protestant missionaries had failed. Their Catholic counterparts, Judd argued, had achieved a far greater degree of success, partly because the Catholic priests' vow of celibacy prepared them for the rigors of China's rural

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life and also prevented them from worrying about the safety and comfort of their families. Although Judd himself understood how the pull of providing for one's family could compromise the missionary's program-he had experienced it too, he conceded-the Protestant missionaries would continue to fail to make greater progress without the same sense of commitment as the Catholics. Judd's later assessment of the Guomindang's collapse in the I 940's reflected the same critical view of the Americans' lack of commitment. Only when Americans-and Protestant missionaries especially-dedicated themselves more vigorously to the cause of China could the situation be reversed. Essentially, Judd was disappointed that the Americans had not made the most of their opportunities: there was too big a gap between the missionaries' intentions and what they had actually done to bring changes in China. Ironically, the missionaries were most effective at home. In fact, two secretaries of state provide some evidence to support the idea that the activities of the missionaries fostered the original American sense of sentimentality and romanticism about China. Dean Acheson, secretary of state under President Harry Truman, described the enthusiasm with which Americans in the early part of the century sought to help China. "Hardly a town in our land was without its society to collect funds and clothing for Chinese missions, to worry about those who labored in distant, dangerous, and exotic vineyards of the Lord, and to hear the missionaries' inspiring reports." Acheson explicitly made the connection between America's economic interests in China, the clipper ships "racing to the Orient ... intent upon the profits of the China trade," and the pattern of missionary intentions "to educate the minds and heal the bodies as well as save the souls of the heathen Chinese.'131 And Acheson's successor, John Foster Dulles, in a speech at the twenty-fifth anniversary dinner of the China Institute in America in 1951, observed that sentiment "rather than materialism [had been] ... the essence of the relationship of the American people with the Chinese people." Contacts between Americans and Chinese had been largely "cultural and spiritual, notably through missionaries."32 God and Mammon, then, under paternalistic language and as part of a liberal-developmentalist ideology, forged the basic premise for American attitudes toward China. America would help China by bringing it into the modern world, which, of course, would be an "American Century." Whether or not Acheson and Dulles were in full sympathy with the pattern of missionary intentions "to educate

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minds" and the simultaneous zeal of businessmen intent upon the China trade, they recognized the strength of the God-Mammon dichotomy. And as public figures, they seemed to verify the longstanding American view of China as a country that needed America's help. But if neither Acheson nor Dulles believed in the simplicity of the China-American relationship, there were many others, not just missionaries, who did, and they made it their set task to impress a new generation of Americans with their views. One of the most successful in this endeavor was the son of Henry W. Luce. Henry R. Luce, like his father, whose primary success as a missionary came through his ability to raise money, found that he, too, had a talent for business. But unlike his father, the younger Luce's accomplishments came on a much grander scale in the secular world: instead of religion, journalism became his missionary work.33 His importance in the Christian conception of China came about because he achieved such notoriety as a businessman in the field of mass media. And Luce did more than make money. As one of his employees said of him, "he was the towering editorial genius" of the twentieth century; an arguable assessment to be sure, but one not without considerable support.34 Protestant missionaries had reached out to Americans through the slow process of preaching at Sunday gatherings over and over in their efforts to raise money for the cause of China. But with one issue of Life in the 194o's, Henry R. Luce reached more Americans than missionaries had spoken to in the previous half-century. And it was Henry R. Luce's steadfast belief in the eventual creation of a Christian, democratic China that combined with his business acumen and journalistic savvy to forge a focused and ultimately influential conception of what China represented to the United States.

CHAPTER ONE

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc. I have read and listened and listened and read and nothing has helped me as much as Mr. Luce's words. -Allen Alderson to President Franklin Roosevelt, February 1941

Henry Luce took his responsibility as a journalist and publisher seriously, but he also championed a decidedly pro-American perspective. From his point of view, what was best for the United States was more important than any sort of traditional journalistic impartiality. A frequent quip made about Luce was that he believed in God, the United States, and the Republican Party, though not necessarily in that order. More to the point, Luce believed that God had chosen the United States, of all nations of the world, for a special mission because Americans were inherently a deeply religious and virtuous people who were supremely positioned to carry out God's work on earth. He believed that his duty as a publisher was to further those ends that naturally resulted from America's unique moral and religious qualifications. He was a Republican because, naturally, God favored a capitalist, free enterprise system. He even went so far as to suggest, in a vein reminiscent of Alexander Hamilton, that America needed a ruling aristocracy. Since the country did not have the natural hierarchy of a European class society, America should look to its business leaders to fill the position. Coming immediately after the stock market crash of 1929, Luce's proposal failed to arouse much popular support. At the same time, however, Luce understood what the majority of Americans wanted to read. His persistent curiosity about every subject imaginable served him well as a publisher, but along with his shrewd sense of mass taste he had an evangelical sense of mission. Instead of simply reporting events, he wanted to shape public opinion. Like the preacher who seeks to save the unrepentant, Luce tried

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Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

to fulfill his personal destiny of converting Americans to his understanding of the United States. Part of that conception included viewing foreign relations through the glass of American exceptionalism. The United States had a mission, and Henry Luce was determined to use his capabilities to bring about the realization of that national purpose. In his ideas of how this sense of mission related to China, Luce picked up where others, like his father, had left off. He took their message and propagated it to more people, more consistently, and over a longer period than Horace Pitkin, Sherwood Eddy, or John Matt could have ever dreamed possible. As the most vocal salesman of an Americanized China, Henry Luce occupied a key position in the unfolding story during the 1930's and 1940's. But another aspect to this developmental process was the willingness displayed by Americans to accept a sentimental and paternalistic rendering of China. As two sociologists have observed, "Packages succeed in media discourse through a combination of cultural resonances, sponsor activities, and a successful fit with media norms and practices." As the principal champion of a romanticized China, Luce managed to tap into longstanding cultural and historical symbols, apply them to China, and project them to millions of Americans. The relationship between the media and their audience is a symbiotic one, further complicated by the fact that many "journalists straddle the boundary between producers and consumers of meaning. 111 Luce straddled that and many other fences in his vigorous efforts to make available public meanings and constructions of China. Their impact became increasingly obvious as he enjoyed phenomenal success in the field of corporate journalism. The success that Time Inc. achieved in presenting its ideas about China paralleled the company's remarkable growth during the latter half of the 1930's. In 1937, despite the continuing economic depression, Luce's adventures in journalism-print, radio, and newsreelcontinued to expand and earn enormous profits. The circulation of Time (founded in 1923) had risen from 450,ooo in 1935 to over 6oo,ooo in 1937. Fortune, directed to a more specialized readership, passed the 1oo,ooo mark in 1937. It was Luce's new photojournalistic magazine, Life, however, that catapulted his corporation into a media empire. The first issue appeared late in 1936, and by 1941, the three magazines had a staggering 3.8 million subscribers. Life's immediate success-so huge and unexpected that Time Inc.

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

I3

initially lost a substantial sum of money-propelled Luce into the dominant position in American journalism for the next two decades. 2 Henry Luce, Harry to almost everyone who knew him, once said that since he had invented the newsmagazine, he could dictate its form. For Time, his concept was a magazine that appeared to be composed by one person, "Not any one man/' he remarked in a letter to Fortune editor Dwight Macdonald in I934, "but a sort of supermanthe sum total of the very few men ... who really 'make it.'"3 Longtime editor Thomas Matthews observed, "Every press undertaking has a personality.'14 At Time Inc., Luce's personality overshadowed all else and gave the journalistic endeavor cohesion and direction. Luce himself once said, "Most of what I know ... and much of what I think has been expressed in some millions of words in Time, Life, [and] Fortune.'15 Not that individuality, independence, and imagination could not contribute to the collective superman. On the contrary, Luce insisted that these very characteristics were central to the success of Time and to the same extent Fortune. Strong, independent thinking was virtually a prerequisite to working at Time Inc. because of the strains and demands of group journalism. I. Van Meter, an editor's assistant, echoed those thoughts in his reply to some questions sent in by a Time reader in I 9 37: "We think the jobs Time and Fortune do are best done by a group with all the checks and balances that group journalism implies." He added that the group journalism approach enabled Time and Fortune to present "as nearly as possible a completely objective picture of the world in which we life." 6 Time Inc. repeatedly stressed its commitment to accuracy, fairness, and objectivity: the company's primary purpose was to achieve with each issue of Time and Fortune (and later Life) a precise and reliable picture of interna" tional and domestic news. One letter to subscribers stated that, in ninety minutes, Time "gives you all of the news-curt, clear, complete.117 For its fifteenth anniversary in I938, Time heralded its latest effort to expand its news coverage and to refine its already demanding standards of excellence in the collection of facts: "Time now undertakes to perfect the newsmagazine service so minutely, so jealously, that every single department of Time can stand inspection under the expert's microscope." In addition to a superb news-gathering organization, Time, the letter said, now possessed one of the world's great "news-verifying systems. 118 The company rededicated itself to achieving unprecedented accuracy with a rigorous set of new standards. When it expanded into radio and newsreel production in the I 930's,

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Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

Time Inc. set itself even more ambitious goals. "We hope to take you on stage for some of the greatest moments of history," "The March of Time" radio program announced in 1941, and "let you feel the news as an unforgettable experience in your own life." The radio program allowed Americans to "live the great events of the year as a memorable personal experience," and it promised to place its listeners at the scene, so that every one of them had" a personal sense" of what it was like to be on Crete during the Nazi invasion, for example, "amid the terrific uproar of falling bombs and chattering archies. 119 With assurances of accuracy and objectivity; not to mention drama, Time Inc. gave the impression that its magazines, its radio program, and its newsreel provided a complete, unbiased picture of the important developments in the United States and around the world. How could anybody question this professed goal of reporting the facts so accurately and objectively? For all this apparent concern and dedication to reporting the facts, Luce himself freely admitted that his magazines carried biases, obviously reflecting his own opinions. But in his way of thinking, the bias was there for the benefit of the readers. "Impartiality;" he once said, was "often an impediment to the truth." Thus Time's responsibility lay not so much in assembling the facts as in conveying "the truth as [Time saw] it. 1110 Simply collecting and arranging facts would be meaningless without the proper moral framework. In other words, the important thing was "having correct value judgments. 111 ' But Luce's pronouncements about the importance of partiality, as derived through proper moral training, were not echoed in advertisements for his magazines. On the contrary; Time, Life, and Fortune continued to insist upon their dedication to reporting the facts objectively. Luce's approach to the world of journalism was not universally acclaimed, not even by staff members and certainly not by many of those who were the subjects of articles in Time, Life, and Fortune. Many of the latter complained of biases, especially when something written about them ran against their interests or portrayed them in a less than favorable light. Some Time staff writers raised issues of fairness and accuracy while they still worked for the company; or else they waited until after they had left. Former Fortune editor Dwight Macdonald's three-part series on Time Inc.'s news coverage, published in the Nation in May 1937, detailed what he considered the obvious biases of Luce's magazines and the way in which they served to mislead readers. Macdonald had tried to bring to Luce's attention the problems he saw in Time's slanted coverage of the news in I 9 36, while he was still

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15

an editor of Fortune and a respected longtime employee of Time Inc. "For some time," he began his letter to Luce in 1936, "I have felt that Time was not as journalistically impartial as it might be, that it has a bias toward the right." His own political leanings tilted toward the left, he admitted, but he did not suggest that Time should switch to suit his affiliation; he only wanted Time to strive to be "a truly objective and impartial magazine." The magazine's reputation, its "greatest journalistic asset for fairly reporting both sides of a question," would be jeopardized should such a bias become institutionalized. He was not alone in his concerns. Three other Time Inc. editors, Eric Hodgins, Wilder Hobson, and Archibald MacLeish, wrote in support of the letter.' 2 To prove his point, Macdonald included three articles from recent issues of Time, which he analyzed in detail, pointing out where and how he thought there was partiality. "Time," he concluded, "has developed a technique of implying things by shrewdly chosen adjectives and neatly turned phrases." He had had a brief tenure at Time and knew the technique that a writer was trained in "to put a prejudiced twist on his story without having to back it up with documentation.1113 By that sort of writing Time was able to perpetuate a subtle political message-especially when the writers were decidedly prejudiced-and raise implications not justified by the material, all the while seeming to report events with the "objective" facts. Luce's response to Macdonald's concerns was a simple statement: "This is the kind of 'steering' criticism which is most valuable to Time at this stage in its career. 1114 Dissatisfied with what he considered Time Inc.'s growing political slant, especially as it manifested itself in a series of Fortune articles on the United States Steel Corporation, Macdonald resigned. His three-part series in the Nation followed soon after. The first article, in the issue of May I, 1937, described Luce as an "impassioned idealist, impatient of fact and ever conscious of a 'mission' to improve his fellow-men." He was a man who was fascinated with "outstanding ('potent') individuals." Although Time always featured a portrait or photograph of an individual on its cover, Macdonald pointed out that Luce could even salute "radicals, once they achieved power," so that Joseph Stalin received better treatment than the Soviet Union as a whole, because Stalin was a person who could be slotted into the poor-boy-makes-good story. In the same way; Benito Mussolini could be celebrated as someone who had achieved success, with no mention necessarily of working conditions in fascist Italy, the political health of the nation, the various economic and social costs of Mussolini's

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Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

policies, or Italy's foreign policy. The air of objectivity assumed by Luce's magazines, Macdonald said, especially in the way that such an attitude was developed through a constant emphasis upon facts, really hid the sophisticated manner in which opinions were quietly passed on to the readers of Time, Life, and Fortune. "No opinions are expressed directly," he noted. Rather, the editors and writers of Time Inc.'s magazines had "developed certain methods of editorializing, all the more effective because the reader-and often the author-doesn't realize what is going on." Although the ostensible foundation of the articles published in Time Inc.'s periodicals was fact, facts could be used selectively to put a slant on a story: "Obviously much depends on just which facts are selected to tell the story." 15 Many readers of both Time and the Nation found these charges astonishing, but also revealing. In a letter to a friend after the article appeared, one reader, R. D. Miller, wrote, "I shall not defend the Editors and less, the publishers of [Time and Fortune] anymore, though they are an entertaining and clever lot of rascals." 16 His reconsideration of his earlier attitudes about Time and Fortune was not based solely upon Macdonald's assertions. Miller himself wrote to Time about the charges made in the series. In responding, editorial assistant I. Van Meter repeated Luce's earlier idea that Time Inc.'s magazines were written by a superman, representing the collective efforts of the various staffs. "Nobody is ever 'author' of any article in Fortune," Van Meter commented. But Macdonald had not claimed authorship of the articles on U.S. Steel. Instead, he had discussed at some length Time Inc.'s group journalism process and the way in which articles at Fortune were researched, written, and edited, and the number of different people who took part in the operation. What Macdonald objected to about the U.S. Steel articles was that the conclusions reached by the editorial staff were not consistent with the facts collected by the researchers. Having been an editor for many years, and not simply a staff writer, Macdonald had not "chafed under [the] group journalism system" of Time Inc. as Van Meter suggested. Even Luce had made note of Macdonald's importance to the company. A few years earlier, Luce had written to him, "You are quite clearly one of the most talented individuals who have developed in this organization."17 Van Meter, however, ignoring such considerations, closed his letter to Miller by ducking behind a cloak of journalistic dignity, a tactic Luce himself fell back on when necessary. Macdonald's Nation articles contained "many inaccuracies," Van Meter declared, and to rebut them point by point would only involve Time "in a controversy in which [it] had no proper part.'118 Miller's friend who

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!7

had brought Time's bias to his attention remarked of Van Meter's condescension, "Any one under indictment who loftily attempts to retire from the scene on their dignity, stands convicted unless the judge and jury are completely non compos mentis," but he allowed that "his smooth facile power of deception would arouse the envy of Machiavelli." 19 Macdonald's articles had the authority of a journalist who knew about Time Inc. at first hand, but they were not the only challenge Luce's media empire received. Luce's self-righteousness and determination to promulgate his views brought him into conflicts not only with his own employees but with various business and political leaders, including Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt and Luce could not have been more opposite when it came to ideology on domestic programs. Although the two would find some common ground in foreign affairs, neither was willing to recognize as much. Luce's disagreement with the New Deal would not allow him to credit FDR with implementing plans very much like what he himself proposed. Similarly, the president disliked Time Inc.'s criticisms of his programs and Luce's refusal to be won over by the Roosevelt charm and popularity.20 In one illustrative example, the two collided in late 1940 over Time's coverage of the election. Roosevelt insisted that Time had seriously deceived its readers. He argued that the newsweekly's masterful way of implying that which it could not state openly or legitimately did not stop it from leaving hints, which, though not explicit, certainly left no doubt as to the magazine's intentions. In one article, Time had suggested that a somber air of stifled fear had pervaded the house at Hyde Park during the recent election returns. The president could not let such insinuations go unchallenged, because he knew they were patently untrue. In a memo to his press secretary, Stephen Early, Roosevelt wrote in reference to Time's coverage of the election, "There are some things in life that one should not let certain people get away with.'121 He felt so strongly about the inaccuracies that he personally wrote a letter to Luce explaining his objections and expressing his feelings about the article in Time. He passed the letter on to Early with the request that he either revise the letter and send it along to Luce or write a new one himself. Whatever his decision, Roosevelt wanted to see a copy of the final draft. Early forwarded FDR's letter and request to the president's administrative assistant, Lowell Mellet, who reworked the president's draft and, in his own terms, expanded it from three pages single-spaced to almost four. Mellet began by analyzing the first fourteen sentences of

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Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

the Time article one by one, carefully dissecting the impressions suggested in each sentence. He then explained why, as a longtime newspaper man hiinsel( he felt the impressions were wrong or misleading. He also pointed out numerous erroneous assumptions and factual errors. For example, he noted that the house at Hyde Park usually had the shutters closed in the evening, and therefore Time's suggestion that something was unusual in closed shutters was deceptive. Time had also made mistakes in the number of people who were present and the clothing they were wearing. "It may be argued that there is no harm done to anybody by a single one of these sentences/' Mellet said, but "great harm is done when a weekly publication such as yours, to which a great body of readers looks for information, furnishes its readers fairy tales and fiction with the pretension that it is furnishing fact." With that, Mellet struck at the heart of the matter: Luce had an uncanny ability to walk the tightrope between fact and fiction. Time had added an adjective here and an adverb there-all seemingly innocent enough when taken alone-to convey a distinct, and false, impression of the proceedings at Hyde Park on election night, the overall effect of which was definitely anti-Roosevelt.22 After carefully laying out what he saw as Time's factual errors and tendentious insinuations, Mellet established the larger problem of Time's approach. Luce, he said, expected "a degree of divine discrimination on the part of men who make your publication that they do not and can not possess." When facts become facts simply because they are printed, Mellet observed, larger troubles lay ahead. "I believe Time is on a dangerous road/' he warned. "Some of us, and you are one, are working and fighting to preserve democracy. A democracy fed on fairy tales by an irresponsible press will not be competent to stand up against the forces now loose in the world." He finished his letter with a recommendation that Luce's publication pursue the truth. Although sometimes harder to obtain, it was just as interesting as "areporter's or a rewrite man's imagination." In a final sarcastic jab, Mellet added that a general policy of writing the truth "might enable the publisher to sleep better, in the knowledge that he had ceased to attempt a function on which God long ago took a prior claim."23 Luce's reply to Mellet's letter was a perfect example of Luce's mastery of circumlocution and prevarication. He merely ignored the issues Mellet had raised about the Time article. Confessing that he was uncertain how to handle the accusations, he wrote, "Simply to rebut your objections to the one story seems to be beside the point since what really concerns you is the entire theory and practice of Time." He insisted that he would love 11 to argue the case right down to the

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

I9

fundamentals," but he avoided that by saying, "You evidently don't like Time," as if that made any discussion impossible. With the accusation that Mellet harbored ill feelings toward Time, Luce redirected the focus, and retreated with his dignity presumably intact. Mellet did not like Time, but, Luce declared, "Many people not only like it but consider it to be the major advance in journalism in our time.m4 Roosevelt's remark in a note to Mellet about Luce's letter was that it was indeed "a slippery reply": "I said on Sunday night that you cannot make an agreement with an incendiary bomb." It was true that "Time makes false reporting extremely attractive," and that, of course, was the problem. The more Luce packaged his version of events in an appealing manner, the more people were willing to be· lieve them, in spite of the distortions or inaccuracies. "George Washington had the courage to admit a sin," Roosevelt added tartly, "Henry Luce lacks that ability!ms If Henry Luce lacked the ability to confess his sins, then so did his magazines. Conceived of as being written by a "superman" and reflecting Luce's biases, Time, Life, and Fortune could not be expected to admit that which their founder and editor could not. The magazines therefore made it a practice not to answer directly' any letters or charges of inaccuracy. The print medium was not the only way through which Luce promulgated his ideas to American people. In I93I, Time Inc. moved onto the radio waves with a Friday-evening program called "The March of Time." This program was originally created as a way of advertising Time, and it was offered free to radio stations around the country in exchange for promotional considerations. The format was simple in that it was meant only to bring the pages of Time to the airwaves in a dramatic form; each program corresponded closely to articles in that week's issue of the magazine. "The March of Time" was supposed to represent "a new kind of reporting-the re-enacting as clearly and dramatically as the medium of radio will permit of some memorable scenes from the news of the week."26 "The March of Time" proved to be a popular success. It was skillfully produced, and it employed a group of capable actors to impersonate the voices of important and well-known personages around the world. At various times, Art Carney, Bill Adams, and Stats Cotsworth all portrayed President Roosevelt.27 When it became known that many listeners thought it was the president himself who was speaking, the White House intervened. Cognizant of the power of Roosevelt's voice and fearful that it might soon saturate the airwaves,

20

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

White House press secretary Stephen Early requested that the radio program cease impersonating the president.28 The administration could not play favorites, Early contended, and if the White Houseallowed "The March of Time" to imitate FDR's voice, then it would have to allow other stations and programs the same right. If overused, the president's smooth timbre and reassuring delivery would quickly lose their impact. "The March of Time" complied with Early's request, but many listeners objected to the ban, and in letters to the press secretary and the president, they expressed their dissatisfaction. One republican (Harmon Butler) wrote that initially he had been skeptical of Roosevelt's plans, but hearing the president's voice on "The March of Time" every week, even if simulated, reassured him that America finally had a leader who could guide the nation. He did not get to hear enough of the president: "Each Friday night I listened eagerly for a new message of hope and encouragement. "29 Another listener who wrote to the White House said much the same: "My conversion to the support of this administration resulted largely from an appreciation of the leadership and high-mindedness of our President, made apparent to me through the excellent broadcasts of the March of Time. 1130 Although many people who wrote to the White House understood the reasoning for the ban, they felt an exception should be made for "The March of Time." Most of them argued that this program should be treated differently because it consistently reported the news with a commitment to high standards and a devotion to the truth. "I understand the statement that all broadcasters must be treated alike," Butler admitted, "and that not all have the good taste and ability of the editors of Time Magazine," but he felt that because "The March of Time" radio program was so "outstanding" an exception should be made.31 "The March of Time can be depended upon" to present the news and the president fairl~ another writer stated. He felt it provided "a real public service" and should be allowed to continue simulating the president's voice.32 Other listeners concurred. One wrote that the radio program's "presentation was so careful and skillful," that he-and others like him he was certain-"was being granted an insight into and understanding of the personality and spirit of [the] President."33 One woman called it "the best news program on the air" and said the ban of Roosevelt's voice "smack[s] too loudly of Mussolini and Hitler.'134 The radio program quickly became so popular that when Luce decided to cancel it because of high production costs, over 22,000 listeners wrote in protesting the decision.35 After securing some finan-

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

2I

cial assistance from the Columbia Broadcasting System, he relented and the program ran until I939· It was brought back in the fall of I94I and continued until the end of the war. In addition to radio, Time Inc. moved into the motion picture business in I935 with a monthly "The March of Time" newsreel. Unlike the radio program, which was designed simply to provide advertising for Luce's magazines, the newsreel was supposed to make money. Within one year, it appeared in more than 5,ooo theaters in the United States and more than 700 in Great Britain. In I936, a year after the newsreel was launched, I 2 million Americans were regular viewers.36 "The March of Time" combined newsreel film, documentary footage, and the recreation of certain scenes, often with the cooperation of the original participants, with spoken text, to create, in the words of official Time Inc. historian Robert T. Elson, "a new form of compelling journalism."37 Although to many this new kind of journalism was indeed compelling, "The March of Time" newsreel never became the profitable venture it was originally envisioned to be. High production costs and a relatively limited number of outlets left no room for expansion and the sort of huge profits earned by the magazines.38 Nonetheless, it came close to breaking even, and, not the least, it served as a magnificent promotional tool for Time Inc.'s magazines. "The March of Time" newsreel continued to play in theaters until I 9 5 I. Both the radio program and the newsreel tried to convey through their respective mediums what Time did in print. Both covered the same important people, issues, and events that dominated the news. Luce himself had little interest in the motion picture medium. His main concern remained with his magazines, and for the most part he had little to do with the production of the programs. But he did not have to; with the stories coming directly from the most recent issue of Time or Fortune, there was little need for such direct control. As Time editor Thomas Matthews noted, with regard to certain issues, specifically China, Luce did direct the policy of the magazine. Each newspaper and magazine has its own personalit}j Matthews pointed out, or, at least, tries to establish one, for that is part of how a readership is created and sustained; but at Time, and also at Fortune and Life, Matthews felt that Luce heavily influenced the essence of that personality. Overt manipulation could be kept to a minimum, for after a magazine achieves its own identit}j "that is the thumb everyone is under." In the end, certain types of stories were always inappropriate given the "personality" of the magazine.39 The temperament of Luce's publications was determined by more than just the articles. In fact, the articles published in the pages of

22

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

Luce's magazines constituted only one way in which Time Inc. as a whole influenced American popular thinking and fostered certain ideas about China. Andrew Kopkind once remarked that what Time Inc. really signified was the rise of corporate journalism, not only for America but for the entire world. The implication of such a development was staggering, he argued, because with such a massive corporation behind its enterprises, Time Inc. could "produce mass ideological manipulation, create worthless demand, and impose a whole range of values which are important to the interests of the corporation, but destructive to the individual." 4 ° Kopkind specifically targeted the advertising copy, more than the articles, for creating this artificial necessity. "Over the weeks and years," he noted, "it is the ads which tell readers how to dress, what to buy, and what to value in life." In sum, "the whole feel of Time . .. its design, its audience, its marketing methods, and its trans-verbal tones give it a cultural position-and by extension, a political one-which mere articles could never establish." 41 Although Kopkind directed his attack at Luce's entire empire, especially the advertising copy, the content of the articles cannot be ignored. And more directly, his comments are especially pertinent for Time Inc.'s coverage of China during the 1930's and 1940's. With China, Luce created the kind of "worthless demand" Kopkind mentioned by pandering to the American predisposition to see American traits in other peoples. He managed to foster dangerous and harmful illusions about China, ones that ultimately backfired. In his overall approach to business, Luce brought a keen sense of what the American public was interested in reading. But his influence cannot be measured simply by adding up the number of magazines he sold. Although often overlooked in discussions of American foreign policy, Luce, as much as any member of the Roosevelt or Truman administrations, helped set the public agenda. The resonance his ideas had within America can be seen in the continually rising circulation figures his magazines achieved year after year. By reaching millions of Americans every week, those magazines could, and did, play a part in forming national opinions on various events, ideas, and people. From roughly 34o,ooo subscribers in 1931 to over 7.3 million readers of his three major magazines less than twenty years later, Henry Luce commanded a central position in American society. In his speeches, Luce celebrated a vigorous America that acted benevolently and altruistically in the realm of international affairs. Devoted to certain fundamental propositions, his America operated with the best interests of all nations in mind. He dedicated himself

Henry Luce and the Rise of Time Inc.

23

to ensuring that his country did not turn its back on the historical, and providentially ordained, mission that beckoned. His unyielding faith in America's future stimulated the way in which he saw the rest of the world. With China, he felt the twin emotional pulls of the United States and of the land where he had spent his childhood. He held steadfastly to the idea that the United States and China formed the perfect union: America with its political, moral, and economic strength and China with its unique position to allow the United States to fulfill its destiny. China was an opportunity for the United States as well as an opportunity for him to achieve whatever he wished on an enormous scale. This view, obviously paternalistic, clouded Luce's thoughts on Sino-American relations. Like a devoted parent, he could not let go of the notion that China would one day develop in America's image. He believed that America's success depended on the Chinese adopting American ways. When later events did not follow that path, he tried to force a change upon American policy. The primary way in which he did that was to misrepresent China to the American people. By equating China and everything Chinese so closely with ideals and events familiar to most Americans, Luce sought to foster illusions about Sino-American harmony that Americans would then insist must be preserved. In this endeavor, however, he needed some assistance.

CHAPTER TWO

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China You and I know that America is capable of great idealistic movements, the primary motive power of which is the unselfish betterment of humanity. -James Linen, Jr., to Henry Luce, March I94I You know the remarkable thing about China is that everyone who comes here becomes enchanted with the tremendous possibilities for achieving whatever it is they want to achieve. -Henry Luce, quoting a young Swedish woman, June I 94 I

China beckoned to Henry Luce in much the same way as it had to his father's generation of missionaries. Sherwood Eddy had once called China "the lodestar, the goal/' and so it was for the younger Luce too. It represented the opportunity for the United States to act benevolently in world affairs and to affect the environment in which it lived-both principal components outlined in his essay "The American Century." China became a symbol of American success-in a sense, a younger, Asian equivalent of America. Within the exceptionalist ideology that stimulated Luce's thinking lay the fundamental tenet that the United States had the obligation to expand, to extend its influence; and many events and currents came together to make China one of the most attractive places for spreading that American dream. Before Luce began his concerted effort to propagate the idea of an Americanized China, however, three important events unfolded during the period 1927-31 that made his endeavor more likely to succeed. The first involved the nominal unification of China under Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and his conversion to Christianity. The second concerned the publication of a novel written by an American raised in China, and the third dealt with the Japanese military's decision to make part of northeastern China a sphere of influence. Chiang's political position arose from his successful military exploits after the death of Sun Yat-sen in 1925. Beginning in July 1926, Chiang launched the Northern Expedition. From a secure position in Canton, he led his National Revolutionary Army north, and within a

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

25

year he was in control of the territory south of the Chang river, including the important cities of Shanghai, the tri-cities of Wuhan, Hankou, and Hanyang, and Nanjing, where he established the seat of the new Nationalist government. Just as importantly for his American supporters, in the spring of I 92 7 he initiated the first of his many anti-Communist campaigns, moving his forces against the left wing of the Guomindang and the Chinese Communist Party in a series of bloody incidents in Shanghai and Wuhan. This ended the united front between the Guomindang and the Chinese Communists, a political coalition that had been in existence since 1923; this also began two decades of repeated efforts by Chiang to eliminate the Communists by means of military force. 1 Equally vital for Chiang's subsequent reception in the United States was his religious acceptance of Christ. The process began in I 92 7, when he agreed to study Christianity at the request of his new family, specifically his mother-in-law? His bride, Soong Meiling, like her parents, was a devout Christian. She took him for walks and read from the Bible for four years until he finally decided to adopt her Methodist beliefs. Chiang's conversion seemed to be an auspicious harbinger for the entire missionary community; Catholic and Protestant alike. Of further importance for Chiang's personal fortunes, his marriage to the middle Soong daughter made him a member of one of the richest and most powerful families in all China. These two developments had a great deal to do with Luce's conviction that the United States could fulfill its historic mission in China. Stimulating the national-and in Luce's case personal-impulse to convert the unregenerate, Chiang's growing strength combined with his newfound Christianity to foster the strong sense of optimism about future Sino-American relations. Along with other American pro-Chinese sentimentalists, Luce latched on to the generalissimo and his wife and promoted them as clear examples of China's movement toward becoming more like America. Chiang's apparent unification of China and his religious conversion combined with two other events, which together created the framework for American interest later in the decade. The first was the publication of Pearl Buck's novel The Good Earth, in I93 r. This novel, translated into thirty languages, was awarded the Pulitzer prize for fiction, was made into a Broadway play in 1933, and in 1937 appeared as an Academy Award-winning Hollywood film, produced at an estimated cost of $3 million. The Good Earth, in all its forms, introduced millions of Americans to China through the trials and trib-

26

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

ulations of Wang Lung, his wife 0-lan (played by Luise Rainer in an Oscar-winning performance), their family, and the characters who came in and out of their lives. Buck's novel managed to ride the crest of what the historian Jonathan Spence has called an "extraordinary upsurge of works either about China or inspired by it" in the West.3 The exoticism of Asia came home to Americans in the form of a central character whose attachment to the land closely resembled Jeffersonian ideas about a virtuous class of yeoman farmers. Buck did not write from her understanding of American history so much as from her own experiences, but the great popularity of her work was clearly tied to its cultural and historical resonance with Americans' ideas about themselves and their heritage as settlers, pioneers, farmers, and frontiersmen-all characters intimately associated with the land in some respect. One reviewer of the film described the story as that of "Wang's devotion to the land and the tragedy that threatened to overwhelm him when he neglected it."4 At the time of The Good Earth's publication, many Americans were experiencing the shock of seeing how years of neglect, overcultivation, and natural calamity had ruined their own land, a devastation that literally saw the creation of dust bowls in certain parts of the country. Wang Lung's persistence and his subsequent ability to overcome the obstacles that his family faced by returning to his land offered at least some hope to disillusioned Americans. Thus, of all the fictional portraits of the Chinese during the 192o's and 1930's, Spence says, "it was Pearl Buck's Chinese peasants, with their stoic dignity, their endurance, their innate realism, and their ceaseless battles with an unrelenting nature, who reached deepest into American hearts.'15 Finally, in 1931, the Japanese invaded Manchuria. The Hoover administration, overwhelmed by the problems of the domestic economy, was not prepared to go beyond rhetorical condemnations. It did not recognize Japan's aggression, but it, and the country as a whole, was disinclined to translate moral outrage into concrete action. The beginnings of Japan's military encroachment did not cause an immediate and overwhelming response in the United States to do something. Instead, together with the Chiangs' Christianity and the images of The Good Earth, they laid the foundation to which Americans would later return in an effort to build their dream of China. As the United States grappled with the sudden and drastic effects of the depression after 1929, China faced a number of its own problems, many of which were even more daunting. After establishing control over the southern half of China with his military expedition,

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

27

Chiang continued his quest to subdue the remaining warlords. He saw the Chinese Communists as the chief threat to his rule, and after turning against them in I927, he initiated a series of campaigns designed to eliminate their influence, the most systematic of which began in I 9 3 I and continued over the next five years. Much of Chiang's military program relied upon the advice given by German advisers, especially General Hans Von Seeckt, who visited China in I933 and again in I934-35· Seeckt's ideas and recommendations struck a responsive chord in Chiang because they paralleled what he wanted to do in the first place. Following the Prussian concept that a singular individual, a "leading personality," needed to steer the nation's direction, Seeckt's counsel neatly allowed Chiang to place himself in such a position. Moreover, the general's theoretical discussion of the relationship between the state and the army called for the creation of an elite military force of manageable proportions, which, in turn, could be used to bring about the internal solidarity Chiang wanted to fashion." Coexistent with the Nationalist government's solicitation of German advice was the rise of a fascist organization called the Blueshirts. Led by Dai Li, a graduate of the Whampoa Military Academy, and a man who later served as head of the Bureau of Investigation and Statistics (an internal security organization), the Blueshirts sought to bring social order through the application of fascist principles. In the words of historian William Kirby, members of the society "opposed capitalism, materialism, individualism, democracy, and communism. They sought a unanimity of national beliefs and activities, forged by the 'leadership principle' from top to bottom, the 'militarization' of education, the nationalization of industry, and (interestingly enough) the collectivization of agriculture. 117 Chiang further attempted to bring some sense of control to Chinese society by embarking upon a curious hybrid of traditional Confucian principles and Christian ideals in an effort called the New Life Movement. This movement, begun in I934, eventually came under the direction of Madame Chiang and included a series of prescriptions relating to the proper conduct of the people in an effort to instill a sense of unity and purpose.8 The reasons for molding national identity became all the more important after the Japanese army precipitated a skirmish with Chinese forces in the city of Mukden in September I93I. Using this incident as a pretext, the Japanese army then invaded Manchuria; by the end of the year it had gained complete control, and in March I932 it announced the creation of the puppet state of Manchukuo, with the for-

28

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

mer emperor Puyi as chief of state. During the next two years, Japanese forces expanded the extent of their control south to the Great Wall. Rather than fight the Japanese aggressively, Chiang continued to concentrate his efforts on the Chinese Communists. In I934, after a number of failed attempts to dislodge them from their soviet along the Fujian-Jiangxi border, he finally began an extermination campaign that combined the military tactics of slow and careful strangulation with political indoctrination of the local population. Recognizing their untenable situation, members of the CCP, numbering some Bo,ooo at the beginning, broke out of the Guomindang encirclement in October and embarked on the famous Long March, of roughly 6,ooo miles to the northern province of Shanxi, which they reached a year later. Throughout the decade, Time Inc. consistently showed its approval of Chiang's efforts to eliminate the Communists. Although Chiang's first Time cover appearance in I 9 3 I stressed his resolve to resist the Japanese encroachment into Manchuria, his second one in 1933 focused on his attempt to bring about internal unity, namely, by putting down the only "really serious threat to his authority": the Chinese Communists.9 By the end of I936, all Luce's publications had clearly evidenced their support for Chiang and his policies. When Chiang made his second Time cover appearance of the year in November, in the post-election week issue, he sat alone, smartly dressed in his military uniform, thoughtfully gazing to the right with his left hand appropriately gripping his officer's sword. 10 The legend beneath the picture captured the essence of the article: "Good roads, good morals, good bombs are his answer to Japan." Luce's political sympathies were obvious: Roosevelt had just won a second term in a landslide victory over Republican Alf Landon, but Time hit newsstands around the nation with a handsome picture of China's nominal leader on its cover instead of a picture of America's overwhelmingly reelected president. The article on the generalissimo appeared to justify the editorial choice by pointing out that Chiang Kai -shek "was unquestionably the greatest man in the Far East." Events in China were quickly beginning to change, and Time hailed Chiang as representing the spark for a new China. He had begun to implement a coherent plan of overall resistance to the Japanese. Through his policies, which included slowly unifying his nation, drawing up a strategic plan for resisting Japanese aggression, effectively eliminating the Chinese Communists, and instilling proper moral values into China's soldiers and citizens, he

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

29

would return China to the community of great nations. Luce's newsweekly provided a valuable service to Americans by reporting on this transformation, since it had received little attention outside Asia; as Time phrased it, Chiang's "brain and will have driven the Chinese people to extraordinary achievements, few of which have made world headlines.'" 1 Chiang's recent demonstration of resolve represented an important change from past actions, though Time was not criticizing his former inactivity; on the contrary; it rationalized his seeming lack of resistance to the Japanese by explaining that he had pursued an attitude of "turning the Christian other cheek" to their insults and military advances. But change was coming. The "small-boned, slenderwaisted" Chiang, also known as the "Ningpo Napoleon/' had recently overseen the construction of concrete pillboxes, trenches, and other fortified defensive works. 12 Moreover, the "Southern Methodist" Chiang had instilled "some rudiments of Christian conduct and morality" into his two and a quarter million troops. The results, Time observed, were evident in a new national fighting spirit. In developing its overall picture of China's leader, Time paid particular attention to Chiang's handling of the Chinese Communists. In what became its standard line on the subject, Time argued that the extermination campaigns should be viewed not as precipitating civil war but rather as allowing the Nationalist troops to engage in military practice sessions before they fought the Japanese in the real game of war. Chiang, Time said, "had waged innumerable practice wars upon the Chinese Communist forces. 1113 In constructing its scenario for China, the magazine insisted that the Nationalist troops would soon offer substantial and unified resistance to the Japanese with their finely tuned fighting abilities honed through years of rehearsals with the Communists. Although Chiang's initiatives had not received their proper attention internationally; his actions had not gone unnoticed domestically. In return for all that he had done for his nation, the people of China gave him fifty American-made warplanes as a birthday gift. 14 Time remarked, "The Christian birthday cake ... carried not so candles but replicas of so foreign-built bombing planes. 1115 "The March of Time" newsreel took note of the gift in one of its releases, and the Associated Press used the story in its 1941 biographical sketch of Chiang, observing that the planes served as a "significant symbol of China's growing modernization. 1116 The birthday cake was an apt symbol of Chiang's baptism. Not only was the cake a Christian one, but Chiang's primary reason for adopting Christianity was his "need

30

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

of a God such as Jesus Christ." Time called Madame Chiang the "Christian Miss Soong" and lauded her role as China's Christian dynamo in the nation's spiritual transformation. The November 9, 1936, Time cover article was the start of Luce's long and consistent campaign to foster an image of Chiang Kai-shek as the popular leader of his people, dedicated to bringing Christian morality, political democracy, and modern industry to China. Time Inc.'s efforts alone did not catapult the generalissimo to instantaneous international prominence, but they did anticipate the growing American interest in China, so that the next episode in the Chinese drama had a ready audience. In December 1936, barely a month after Chiang's Time cover appearance, the Chinese warlord Zhang Xueliang kidnapped the generalissimo during his visit to the city of Xi'an, in Shaanxi province, to which Chiang had flown to outline his military plans for yet another "final" extermination campaign against the Communists. Zhang Xueliang was a loyal subordinate who had eradicated Communists from the Hubei-Henan-Anhui region in central China west of Nanjing, but he was unhappy with Chiang's insistence on prosecuting a civil war against the Chinese Communists instead of organizing national resistance against the Japanese.17 Zhang and his troops therefore detained-"kidnapped"-Chiang for thirteen days. During that time, the importance of whether Chiang lived or died combined with the inherent drama of the kidnapping to create not only a sensation within China but an international story as well, one reported by Time Inc. at great length. Time's initial coverage on December 21, 1936, made two points very clear at the outset: Chiang was "the most powerful man in Eastern Asia/' and his kidnapping had been arranged by a former opium addict who apparently had fallen victim to Communist, or proCommunist ideas. Evidently, Zhang wanted China's leader to stop his military campaigns against the Communists and concentrate his resources upon actively resisting the Japanese. Time insisted that Chiang had intended to fight the Japanese all along, but it again stressed that Nationalist troops needed more practice fighting the Communists. Zhang's precipitous actions had done nothing to promote Chinese unity or harmony, and his decision to hold China's great leader only confirmed earlier judgments of him as a drug-crazed, Communist sympathizer. 18 Time reiterated these two themes in its next issue: Chiang was still the greatest man in Asia and his death would threaten to undermine "the enormous progress China has made ... during the past decade"; and Zhang Xueliang had a drug habit, for which he had been treated but not cured: "Young [Zhang]

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

3I

was NOT cured of drug addiction in Peiping, for the reason that his concubines kept smuggling th~ stuff to him in the hospital.'" 9 The December 28 article did admit that Zhang's reason for the kidnappingto force the generalissimo to fight the Japanese actively-was extremely popular, even if it was "an ex-dope's not too bright idea." But it rep~ated Time's excuse for Chiang, that his army needed a little more practice fighting the Communists before taking on the Japanese. Battling the Communists would promote harmony within China, because, Time said without elaborating, they were "unChinese in important respects." It added that if the Chinese Communists ever got hold of Chiang, they would see to his swift execution. Time's summary of the situation in China was not altogether accurate. At the time of his kidnapping, Chiang was not universally heralded as the leader of China, and indeed his insistence on waging "practice wars" against the Communists had led to increased dissatisfaction with his leadership.'0 Two days after his arrival in Xi'an, a few thousand students there organized a march to protest Japanese activities. They also tried to present a petition, the thrust of which was that Chinese should not be fighting Chinese, at a time when the country faced a Japanese invasion. The students met armed resistance and two were wounded when the local police, supported by members of Chiang's personal force, opened fire. Zhang Xueliang worked to ease tensions from the shooting, and as part of that effort he presented the students' demands to the generalissimo only to be chastised for trying "to represent both sides.'121 Chiang was not interested in the students' concerns. The Chinese Communists represented a much greater threat in his mind than did the Japanese, and he was determined to secure his position before turning on the foreign enemy. He wrote in his diary that he told the commanders of certain troops in Shaanxi "that the banditsuppression campaign had been prosecuted to such a stage that it would require only the last five minutes to achieve the final succesS.1122 Chiang's refusal to listen to advice caused considerable friction within certain groups. In particular, the Dongbei troops, which had been stationed in Shaanxi since losing their Manchurian homeland in 1931, wanted to fight the Japanese, not other Chinese, and they now refused to continue the campaign against the CCP, which was urging national unity to resist the Japanese. Chiang had flown to Shaanxi in an effort to placate the Dongbei troops, and when once there he pressed his plan to attack the Communists, he found himself

32

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

on the morning of December r 2 in the embarrassing position of being held captive. He was immediately presented with an eight-point program that called for the reorganization of the Nationalist government to include all political parties, a prompt end to the civil war, and the commencement of organized resistance against the Japanese. Many of the troops demanded Chiang's death but only after he had been humiliated in a public trial.23 Chiang was saved from this fate by the Chinese Communists, who, instead of lusting for blood as Time had said they would, quickly arrived on the scene to calm matters down. Headed by Zhou Enlai and supported from Moscow by Joseph Stalin, who feared an increase in Japan's power if China disintegrated into political chaos, the Chinese Communist delegation submitted its proposals to Chiang, and in so doing acknowledged his position as commander-in-chief.'4 The Communists recognized that a united front against Japan required a living Chiang with his position and prestige intact. Far from advocating his execution, therefore, they convinced the Dongbei troops that he must not be killed. Thus all parties reached a tenuous understanding, and on Christmas Day Chiang Kai-shek left Xi'an. Very little of the details or outcome of this episode ever appeared in Time Inc.'s coverage. Propelled by Luce's romanticized notions, Time's euphemisms about "practice sessions" clouded the truth of growing discontent with Chiang's insistence on conducting civil war while faced with a foreign invasion, and thus Chiang emerged from the kidnapping with greater recognition and prestige than ever before. And Americans, misled by the inaccurate, incomplete reporting, continued for the most part to have wholly erroneous ideas about the political and social conditions in China. Richard de Rochemont, a prominent staff member of "The March of Time" newsreel, commented of this period, "We felt we were on the side of the angels in most cases, with the possible exception of Chiang Kai-shek, whom we regarded as a protege of Mr. Luce, and who was the only sacred cow we admitted." 25 Luce could not resist the temptation to intervene to guarantee the appropriate type of coverage for his beloved symbol of China. "The March of Time" produced a special newsreel called "The Far East," about Chiang's kidnapping by the "one-time drug addict" Zhang Xueliang, whose irresponsible action had brought China's progress to an abrupt halt. Like Time, the newsreel coverage was clearly not in sympathy with Zhang's insistence on war with Japan. On the contrary, Chiang's policy of ignoring the Japanese insults "until strengthened and unified" seemed the best

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

33

course of action. The bulk of the newsreel was devoted to illustrating how Chiang's policies had brought progress to China. The modernization of key cities gave an indication of the country's headway toward achieving an industrial economy on a par with that of Western nations. "Booming her way through the world depression," "The March of Time" asserted, "Shanghai is a symbol of the progress Chiang Kai-shek plans for all China." It is not surprising that Shanghai would stand as the mark of advancement. Shanghai had become the "capital of big business," and according to Luce, big business was the engine of progress.'6 "Today, Shanghai's skyline towers with the tallest buildings ever erected outside the United States." The newsreel shots of Shanghai's skyscrapers were in fact very like those of New York City-indeed, they appeared to have been part of an earlier piece on the same newsreel about young American women seeking jobs there. That aside, not only had industry promoted the construction of tall buildings just as it had in the United States, it had also compelled China to move into the modern world and discard such outmoded practices as ancestor worship. With the Chinese abandoning their outdated past and moving rapidly forward in their national evolution, "The March of Time" predicted an attractive future for the majority of the people: "As money circulates freely among natives, great masses of workers throng into new Chinese-owned department stores to buy modern merchandise." The footage accompanying the text showed department stores that looked like Macy's or Gimbel's, filled with Chinese consumers enduring the rigors of shopping. The Americanization of China even included the manufacturing of Eskimo Pies "for Chinese consumption." More text and footage showed that skyscraper construction and production lines were only part of China's modernization. There was footage of Shanghai's social life, with its "new clubs where gay, young Chinese enjoy European entertainment." Ancient teahouses had recently given way to soda fountains, and the popularity of the "sophisticated cinema shown in deluxe first-run movie houses" also served as examples of China's ongoing transformation. The overall message was: "China needs a Chiang Kai-shek to lead her if she would successfully fight off Japan." The "slim, young brother-in-law of sainted Sun Yat-sen" was the only person who could forge the nation's unity and continue the progress toward creating a modern society. With so much already having been accomplished under his brief rule, the future appeared to hold unlimited promise. In this conception of Sino-American relations, the vast geographical

34

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

distance separating the two nations could no longer hinder the converging trends between them in religion, politics, business, and culture. To Chiang's Christian supporters, Zhang Xueliang's release of the generalissimo on Christmas Day had obvious significance. Time's coverage repeated the familiar themes: "the most powerful man in Eastern Asia" being freed by the poorly dressed, "one-time dope fiend," Zhang Xueliang.27 It highlighted the Christian angle, noting that Chiang had "insisted upon reading the Bible during most of his" captivity. Later, Chiang would speak publicly of how his religious faith had sustained him during the period, comparing his own ordeal with the many trials faced by Jesus. Clearly, the timing of his release provided a coincidence too great for Christian supporters to ignore. In effect, Chiang and China were spiritually reborn. Chiang himself played no small part in publicizing the Christian aspect of his character. It was something he continually stressed in his public addresses. His Good Friday message in I 9 37 is a notable example. This sermon, given at the Central Conference of Eastern Asia of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Nanjing, was entitled "My Spiritual Conception of Good Friday. 1128 Chiang began the sermon by observing, "Without religious faith there can be no real understanding of life." He then went on to expound on his thoughts during the preceding December when he was held captive by Marshal Zhang. He had been a "constant reader of the Bible" for ten years, he said, and while in captivity, he had requested only one thing: a Bible. Although his travails were meaningless compared with Christ's, he felt that his two weeks of detention in Xi'an had instilled in him an even greater sense of mission and purpose: in the same way that Christ had entered Jerusalem knowing what dangers awaited him, he had traveled to Xi'an fully dedicated to serving his country "without any consideration of personal safety." While he was held captive, his thoughts had turned to "the forty days and nights Christ passed in the wilderness withstanding temptation." And as he pondered the hardships Christ had endured, he redoubled his will to resist the evil forces that had set upon him. "With the spirit of Christ on the Cross I was preparing to make the final sacrifice at the trial of the so-called 'People's Front.'" As Christ had died for mankind, so he would sacrifice himself for the Chinese people. He had, as he noted later, extended himself into an instrument of Christ in "his plan for saving the world. 1129 A year later, Chiang insisted that the plight of the Jews nearly two thousand years before and the present situation facing the Chinese were more than coincidental. Like Jesus, he too had "been promoting

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

35

a social revolution" with his New Life Movement. And as Jesus had led a religious revolution against considerable odds, Chiang's efforts to bring Christianity to China could be viewed in the same light.30 Chiang also linked himself and his Christian charity to the celebrated founder of the Chinese Republic, Sun Yat-sen. He insisted that Sun had taught him a great deal and that although his original trust in Sun had not been religiously oriented, "it was similar to a religious faith." He discussed Sun's Christianity and indicated that Sun had displayed many Christian characteristics, the principal one being "love-love for the emancipation of the weaker races, and for the welfare of the oppressed people." As Chiang became attached to those ideals, he came to see the beauty of Christ's teachings.31 With speeches like these, Chiang bolstered his supporters at home and abroad. In the words of one American admirer, Chiang was "introspective, patient, tolerant, full of wisdom, ascetic and almost saintly."32 For Luce, such public confirmation was no longer necessary. By early 193 7, he had firmly established his support for Chiang and the Nationalist government. The generalissimo's religious conversion had provided the foundation for Luce's attachment, and his chimerical political and economic progress solidified Luce's confidence in his ability to march China down the road toward Christian salvation, political democracy, and economic modernization. For many of the American missionaries who traveled to China, democracy was "a way of life as well as a political system, and it was the Christian way of life."33 Those words apply equally well to Luce's thinking. According to his general conception of the link between religion and politics, Jesus Christ equaled democracy. Like the Protestant missionaries of his father's generation, Luce believed that if Christianity could be brought to China, democracy would certainly follow, and from there, the development of trade would rapidly ensue. Although it was a nineteenth-century United States minister to China who had said that missionaries were the pioneers of trade and economic development, it was Henry R. Luce who attempted to bring that idea to fruition in the twentieth century. Luce's central focus upon an American-dominated international system stemmed from his unyielding faith in an ideal United States that used its power benevolently to further the spread of freedom around the world. It followed that the United States was uniquely appointed to handle the world's problems. "The challenge of the circumstances of our age is, above all, a challenge to America," Luce told a graduating class at Stanford University. The pressing moral imperatives challenging the world were particularly important for Ameri-

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China cans, because of their unique moral sensitivity-" an American kind of feeling": "Nothing is more American than to feel what ought to be done can be done and what can be done ought to be done." 34 One of the things that Luce was sure "ought to be done," before, during, and even after World War II, was for the country to throw its full support behind the Nationalist government of China. In a letter to the president of the National War Fund one month before the Allied invasion of Normandy in 1944, he emphasized specifically what he believed "ought to be done by American generosity": namely, the National War Fund should increase its financial support to China.35 "The very simple fact," he wrote, was that the Chinese people were the most numerous of America's allies, and yet the United States had done very little to assist them. China's enormous size, in addition to its important contribution to prosecuting the war effort, dictated that it should receive greater assistance. China's vast geographical territory and its tremendous population combined with Luce's faith in the overall historical mission of the United States to create the unique position China came to occupy within a much grander concept. The two nations were destined to form a perfect and complete union, in which the United States was the provider and China the recipient. And with its hundreds of millions of people, China promised to be a fabulous recipient, or the most prodigal of sons. First, however, Luce had to explain China to his fellow Americans, so that through a better understanding of their Asian counterparts they could help in the journey toward world harmony. A year after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Luce was the principal speaker at a pro-China service held at Saint Thomas Church in New York City. His main theme was the similarity between the United States and China and the benefits that would derive from their cooperation: Chinese-American understanding would "in no small part" soon provide America's spiritual, economic, and political salvation. The Chinese had readily accepted Christianity into their society because it was so close to their more familiar beliefs: "When the Christian prayer first came to China the humblest farmer instantly understood it, so like it was to his: 'Our father who art in heaven.'" Indeed, China's religion was directed toward the brotherhood of man-of all mankind, in fact. With their emphasis upon helping all nations and through the selfless continuation of their struggle against the Japanese, the people of China challenged Americans to provide the kind of military and spiritual assistance the nation prided itself upon. China looked to the United States to live up to its spiritual and

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

37

moral ideals: "China challenges our Christian faith ... and if we fail there, we fail totally. 1136 Luce emphasized that this challenge to the United States was especially important because China had "embarked upon a vast reformation-partly inspired by the Christian gospel." For the United States to keep pace with this progress, Americans would have to raise "with new devotion, the banners of our faith." The effort promised to be considerable, but the results would more than make up for it: "When America's victory of faith meets China's victory in the grand confluence of history, we shall fear no more the decline and fall of civilization." And the only way for the United States to respond was as a Christian nation. "The United States cannot meet this challenge ... except as it is a Christian nation, moved, in this matter, by the prayer of those who truly pray: 'Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done-on earth.'" Luce's pro-Chiang stance was clear, and his insistence that China was engaged not in a revolution or a repudiation of the past, but rather in a reformation, a reconsideration of China's traditional strengths, allowed him to borrow liberally and loosely from Chinese history to support his statements. The one person who epitomized all that America hoped China would achieve was Chiang Kai-shek, the "sword and symbol of this mighty reformation." Whether Luce was following Chiang's own personal assessment or really believed it to be true, he alluded to Chiang in terms that explicitly drew a connection to Jesus Christ. Just as Christianity revolved around the actions and words of one man, so too had China come to be represented by one man. The Chinese were not known as the sort of people who became attached to a single figure, he said, "But in their great crisis they found the man they needed": "the greatest soldier in Asia, the greatest statesman in Asia, America's friend: Chiang Kai-shek." Luce's speech went from superlative to more superlative, in an evangelical fervor of impassioned praise for China, Chiang, and the union with the United States of America. Chiang was China's savior: "For a hundred years the Chinese have been waiting for him." They had been waiting ever since the "dissolution of old China" began in the middle of the nineteenth century, and just as Moses had come to rescue the Jews, so Chiang had come to rescue his people. Indeed, since the Taiping Rebellion in the middle of the nineteenth century, "the Chinese have understood that the signs portended vast upheaval and out of the anguish would come the man to lead them. He has come." Wherever Chiang traveled, Luce declared, there went the gov-

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China ernment of China. Regardless of his military titles and despite the problems caused by Japanese actions, Chiang "carried with him, like a holy grail, the invincible purpose that China shall be united and that China shall be free." Luce's Christian conception of the relationship between the United States and China led perhaps inevitably to his attempt to influence the direction of Sino-American relations. In his 1941 essay, "The American Century," Luce had offered a general prescription for the kind of American internationalism he envisioned, one that predated the nation's overt involvement in the war. But within his broader plan there lay plenty of room to include the special relationship he had in mind with China. He began by exhorting his countrymen to look beyond the geographical boundaries of the nation, to see the interrelationship between world events and America's national security. The country was at war, he declared, even if Americans did not realize or admit it. The United States had failed in r 9 r 9 to provide for a healthy international community; one free from the sickness of aggression. Because of that failure, the nation now faced another crisis, but that predicament provided for another opportunity as well. This conception of history presented Americans not so much with an opportunity as a duty to face up to their global obligations. America was "the most powerful and the most vital nation in the world." With such a position came tremendous responsibilities, and Luce implored his fellow citizens "to accept wholeheartedly our duty and our opportunity ... and in consequence to exert upon the world the full impact of our influence, for such purposes as we see fit and by such means as we see fit." Whether or not the United States chose to accept this obligation carried with it important and far-reaching consequences not just for the nation but for the structure of the entire world. Isolationism, Luce said, constituted a morally and, from a practical standpoint, a bankrupt policy, and he inveighed against returning to the traditional but no longer useful foreign policy views of the Republican Party. But President Roosevelt was also at fault for not guiding the country more vigorously toward accepting its manifest duty in international affairs. America's new policy; Luce declared, must be "an internationalism of the people, by the people, and for the people." Economic enterprise, technical and artistic skills, altruism, and ideals-all had to be exported in order to guarantee the creation of an American-inspired world. With regard to China, Fortune magazine stated that American commitments there were "too long-standing, too deeply derivative

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

39

from basic Protestant Christian attitudes" to be abandoned during these difficult times.37 Disseminating the American spirit within Asia appeared to be an especially well-founded idea given the region's potential economic opportunities. The area would be worth nothing if the United States repudiated its responsibilities. A more promising alternative, however, showed China to be worth "four, five, ten billion dollars a year" if the United States undertook to fulfill its obligations. Three months after "The American Century" essay appeared, Fortune advanced the same ideas about the potential of the China trade, and again the figures mentioned were in the billions.38 The "New China" presented the United States with an historic opportunity and the nation should seize it without delay. Through Time Inc., Luce urged Americans to recognize that events in China had a direct impact on their lives. Because of the connection between the two nations' fortunes, American foreign policy in Asia had to encourage the development of a strong China. "China is bent upon the creation of a new world," Fortune proclaimed, and the United States, "in considering the problem of foreign trade," should assist this construction, because China, "the biggest potential market on earth," was eager for the United States to exert its influence in the area. Fortune had earlier noted that a failure to help "would do violence not only to China but to U.S. pride, to the feeling that we are a great democratic Christian nation with ideals to uphold in all circumstances. 1139 In order for Time, Fortune, and, after November 1936, Life to reinforce these notions about China's potential, the three magazines had for several years purposely shown the "Middle Kingdom" in the most favorable light possible. One of the three points always emphasized was the close resemblance between China and the United States geographically and even in some sense historically. Geographically, the two nations were presented as virtually indistinguishable. In one issue, Time declared that, having captured "China's Boston (Peking), New York (Shanghai) and Washington (Nanking)," the Japanese were advancing on "China's Chicago (Hankow)."40 Canton was described as ''the teeming, sultry New Orleans of China."41 China also had areas similar to American regions and states. Outer Mongolia could be equated to America's Pacific Northwest and the Shaanxi province held promise as "China's potential Pennsylvania."42 (China's Pittsburgh, however, did not lie in Shaanxi province, for one Fortune article noted that China's Pittsburgh was the wartime capital of Chongqing, which is located in Sichuan province.)43 Referring to

40

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

China's western region, Time commented, "Coastal Chinese ... know more about Western China than George Washington knew about [America's] Wild West." When Japanese victories in the eastern region forced the Chinese to retreat westward, Time's story on the massive movement of people and equipment again inserted a comparison with American history: Chinese government officials, soldiers, and students had embarked upon a "covered wagon trek to their Wild West."44 The second consistent editorial policy was to show Chinese government officials and the Nationalist army in a favorable light. Almost without hesitation, Time Inc.'s magazines saluted their abilities and their accomplishments. Time lauded two Guomindang officials as Asia's "greatest, suavest diplomats." Chiang's brothers-in-law, always highly regarded in the pages of Time Inc.'s publications, were "the solid, wistful Yale-trained, Dr. H. H. Kong, and the glossy, competent Harvardian, T.V. Soong."45 A Fortune article described the two in equally flattering terms.46 A Time cover story in June 1941 praised Chiang's military adviser,· Zhen Zheng, whom Time called "brilliant" in his command of the approach to the wartime capital of Chongqing. Although the Chinese army was unknown to the world at large, the article said, and was short on the important tools of modern warfare, it made up for its lack of equipment in "numbers, know-how and morale." The troops were hardened and "campaign-wise" after so many years of fighting. Countering what it felt was the common American misperception of Chinese troops, Time noted, "China's best troops belie all the old saws about Chinese cowardice and indifference." As proof of their fighting spirit, it offered a description of them as "husky, shavenpated sons of the soil who ... like better than anything else to close with the Japanese hand to hand." Recently, they had added to their courage an ability to fight for long periods of time under difficult conditions and with'few rations. The young but promising officer corps that led these troops made the defeat of the Japanese that much more likely. Zhen himself was only forty-one, and the entire corps constituted the "youngest officer class in the world," but they were tough and intelligent. Physically large by Chinese standards, "hearty and jolly at rest and brutally energetic in action," these young officers displayed a strong devotion to the democratic ideals espoused by Sun Yat-sen, "China's George Washington." 47 Fortune, too, described the top officers as strong, intelligent, youthful, and enthusiastic: "probably the most colorful group ... since Napoleon fished the marshals of the Grande Armee out of the regimental barracks."48 More impor-

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

4I

tantly, they loved the United States, because they felt America would send them the military equipment they desperately needed to fight the Japanese. "If & when someone delivers China's soldiers the goods," Time predicted, "they will be able to finish the job."49 Earlier, Time had extended its praise of China's soldiers to the Communists, even as Chiang was struggling to assert his dominance. "Some of Chiang's best troops," Time noted in an issue in December 1938, "are the Chinese Communist armies." 50 The guerrilla fighters damaged railroad lines, harassed Japanese troop and supply convoys, and swarmed over isolated garrisons. Wherever the Chinese Communists could achieve favorable odds, they attacked. Time's coverage even highlighted Zhu De, commander of the Communist troops, as "China's No. r Guerrilla Fighter." The "modest, crinkly-eyed" Zhu and his guerrillas were part of what Time called the "New China." Fortune joined in with praise of its own. "The Communist guerrillas," it noted, were "men of an unparalleled efficiency."51 And in the most surprising instance, in June 1939, Time even asserted that the communism espoused by Mao Zedong and Zhu De amounted "to little more than a Populist desire to give land to the tax-gutted and landlord-ridden Chinese peasant."52 Time Inc.'s dalliance with the Chinese Communists was notallowed to go too far, however. It was apparent that the military actions of Mao's guerrilla fighters helped tie down Japanese forces, but the Communists nonetheless represented the biggest political threat to Chiang's rule. Time warned that the generalissimo could not relinquish too much political authority or proffer too many military supplies to the Communists. Rather, he had to follow a policy Time called "flexuous." By 1941, writing about Chiang's difficulties generally, the newsweekly sided with the Nationalist government wholeheartedly and defended its partial destruction of the Chinese Communist New Fourth Army as a necessary move to prevent internal disruptions "by disarming and disbanding the Communist[s] ... for insubordination."53 The third editorial policy in regard to China was, of course, the consistently favorable treatment of Chiang Kai-shek begun in the 1930's. Time lauded Chiang in cover stories and even named him and Madame Chiang as man and wife of the year for r 9 37. Similarly, Fortune showed excessive bias toward the generalissimo, especially in an issue in the fall of r 94 r. The Time cover article of January 3, r 9 38, celebrated Chiang because he had brought unity to the Chinese people.54 In revitalizing the econom~ raising, training, and equipping a capable military force, and providing an impetus for the moral rejuvenation

42

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

of the nation, Chiang had taken the "traditionally disunited Chinese people" and given them the rudiments of a "national consciousness." The progress China had made under Chiang was "phenomenal." The creation of a sound currency, the construction of an infrastructure, the development of flood control and famine relief-all constituted "revolutionary" fundamental changes. Chiang's effective and modern military force was attacking the Communists in the way "a football coach uses a scrub team to train the regular army of New China." The article defended Chiang's slowness in moving against Japan: "New China was not ready to use her War Machine" when the Japanese attacked in the summer of I937, and this policy was the best one for China. Only the weight of "Chinese public opinion" had forced Chiang to reconsider his "practice sessions" against the Communists. A later article echoed the same theme: Chiang "was determined to resist the Japanese," but first he had to "organize his nation, strengthen his army, build roads, prepare for the inevitable retreat into the interior."55 Thus, his refusal to fight the Japanese in I 9 3 7 was for the good of the entire nation. Not the least, Time observed in its January I 938 cover story, Chiang had strengthened the moral fabric of his nation. Time described Chiang's New Life Movement as a "big dose of the castor oil of Puritanism," as if exaggeration placed Chiang's social retrenchment in the context of American religious history. But Chiang's program was far more rigid than anything imagined by John Winthrop, Thomas Hooker, or John Cotton, especially in its call for the thorough militarization of Chinese life.56 Time Inc.'s other major piece celebrating Chiang was the September I94I issue of Fortune, which was entirely devoted to "China the Ally." The content and general tenor of the four long articles were much the same as Time's January 1938 man-and-wife-of-the-yearportrait. Fortune characterized Chiang as "still virile, ... [the] bitter, hardened, soldier of the camps." 57 His glory in creating one China had not been dulled by the fact that he had defeated the warlords with "an astuteness less military than human and political." His retreats in the face of Japanese attacks are described as "great" retreats, just as his future offensives would undoubtedly be equally" great." The future of China lay with Chiang: "and he has so far discharged his responsibility with superb skill." In Fortune's portrait, Chiang was a politically shrewd, militarily astute, and morally upright leader who seemed to symbolize everything America could want in a foreign head of state. He was intent upon bringing China into the Christian, democratic community of nations, and he also-to Fortune's satis-

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

43

faction-offered to assist the United States in finally realizing its dogged belief in the China market. From there, the two nations could march toward their mutual goal of creating a Christian capitalist world order. The period immediately preceding the American entry into World War II saw a dramatic shift in the quantity and type of information Americans received about China. Time Inc. saw its circulation figures rise to unprecedented heights, and it further expanded its reach by venturing into radio broadcasting and newsreel production. In the process, it became the first multimedia empire in the world. Along with this growth came the development, propagation, and reinforcement of certain conceptions about China. Ideas about Chinese democracy, its importance as a potential market for American trade, the fighting integrity of the Nationalist troops, and most of all, the strength, wisdom, and Christian convictions of Chiang Kai-shekall became mainstays in articles. Whatever was really happening in Asia was somewhat beside the point. Contradictory information was either ignored or rationalized so that the larger image of an Americanized China remained viable. In his account of life in provincial China, the journalist Graham Peck wrote that he had returned there from the United States in 1940 filled with ideas "acquired from the American press: the gallant losing battles, the brave and clever guerrillas, the millions of determined refugees fleeing west ... a new country a-building .... And looming over the whole united land [was] the massive figure of the Generalissimo, his attractive wife only slightly in the background."58 Of the American media, none was as large as Time Inc., nor any as consistent in propagating that message. During the last half of the 193o's, the coverage of events in China offered by Luce's media outlets reflected his personal biases more than it accurately reported the developments there. But for Luce, that was the point. Of his approach to journalism, one commentator noted, Luce "was the missionary, the believer, a man whose beliefs and visions and knowledge of Truth contradicted and thus outweighed the facts of his reporters." 59 He took it as his duty not simply to relate world events but to educate Americans on their responsibilities. He was not a reporter; he was a preacher, and he sermonized on behalf of China. The five years before the United States entered World War II proved to be pivotal for American conceptions of Chiang, especially as they were shaped and publicized by Time Inc. From 1936 until 1941, Chiang was portrayed as China's political and spiritual savior. During

44

Time Inc. and Its Stake in China

the same period, as Luce's personal convictions about China intensified, his media conglomeration grew at a dazzling pace. These two developments reflected and reinforced the larger assumptions circulating in American society about China. In that respect alone, they are important for understanding the fundamental hopes of the "American Century" there.

Uncle Sam feeding a Chinese child, by Ed Hunter. From "Cheer China," for the benefit of United China Relief, Incorporated. B. A. Garside Collection, Hoover Institution Archives.

China Fights On, by John Gaydos. UCR's 1945 poster. George C. Marshall Research Foundation.

How Organized Labor Can Aid the People of China. Indusco Papers, Butler Library, Columbia University.

Org:>.nited lobor in Americo, it is believed, will wish to give its support to United Chino. Relief fnr ten mojor reasons:• Deco. use China is oiding in the world stru~~le ogoinst Foscism. The war in China is just another phnse of the fight :against Hitlerism and what it stands for.

" I•

2. 3.

Decause China, in keepin~ the Japanese ag~ressor occupied, is acting :u a battlefront fetr our own country in the F:ar East. China means America's defense. Because China is waging a Wnr o( Independence such as we fought

bo.ck in 1776-17 3. j:>.p:>.n is seeking to destroy the n:>.tionol existence of the Chinese nation.

4. Decause,

if the Chinese are beaten, they will be org:ani=ed on a sl:'\\'e~ l:1.bor b:ui• by a dictatorship. Chinese labor will thus brin~; down our own labor stnndard-t.

I.

·' nec:».use if, with our help the Chinese are victorious, they will develop their nntion :u a free people, who believe in democratic ri~hts and principles.

~.

Decause a• a result of the continued resUt:lnce o( the Chinese people, their nceds constitute one of the J:re:uesr needs of :'ill time. h is almost impossible to measure the degree of human suHerinJ: involved.

7.

necause the Chinese have generously contributc:cl in dmts of need in our country. Dock in 1918 they g~ve to the Americon Red Cross in beh>lf of flood victims $1,400,~14 times the :>.mount a ked.

9.

Dcco.use in addition to the superb Chinese :>.rmy, the Chinese people, _ _ OrJ::-tni%ed into heroic bands of guerrilla fis:;:htcr•, have been :t.n im .. portant foetor in stopping a n o.ggressor in his tracks.

~ flal!l!ll

9.

Dcco.use China· hos fought to help herself, or~anlllng a ~:reat system of cooper:uive industrial enterprises and vest·pockct workshops which ploy :>. vito.! part in enabling the people to c:>.rry on.

10. Because

L:>.bor oHiciolly endorse this effort and h•s formed o repre• sent:\tive ational Committee to aid it and because many leading lobor ~roups ho.ve o.lr.dy g~nerously contributed to it.

How Organized Labor Can Aid the People of China. Indusco Papers, Butler Library, Columbia University.

China Shall Have Our Help, by Martha Sawyers. United China Relief's 1942 poster. George C. Marshall Research Foundation.

China-First to Fight, by Martha Sawyers. UCR's 1943 poster. George C. Marshall Research Foundation.

"l!:IJr Jflabonna tmb £htlb" I ht• ;\Jadnmu .:~nd Chtld" "3 J).lintrd by \I.HLmH 1.-.. rh.mJ: d;~u •htu of llr 1\.;tn \"u\\u tht· ~n:JI tholar :and rrlurmtr "'h•l a ""'ttd

tht• tmJ-wror In I I;'\ In hi' 100 tb~ or rdorm \lltl.amr W-Clun~: :a tlnout Bu(Mhi,t. li\· in It 1nr n\1 1 diH '" m nv p:oocl v.ork It 1 not rlitfhult for a Chmt artl t t~med m the Buddht..t aroadattun to IJ31nt . ";ulonn:~ : form ny uf tht· thuu~ht connt u·d Y.Hh tht· ~~ ulonna Ut" ~"·•u